Materialising identity: The co-construction of the Gotthard Railway and Swiss national identity 9789048521166

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Table of contents :
Acknowledgments
Table of contents
Introduction: The Gotthard as a national image
1. National building practices at stake
2. Celebrating the Gotthard Railway
3. Travelling the Gotthard
4. Re-writing history
Conclusion
Epilogue
Endnotes
Bibliography
Summary
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Materialising identity: The co-construction of the Gotthard Railway and Swiss national identity
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Acknowledgements

Materialising identity

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Materialising identity

Foundation for the History of Technology & Aksant Academic Publishers Technology and European History Series Ruth Oldenziel and Johan Schot (Eindhoven University of Technology) Series Editors The Technology and European History series seeks to present scholarship about the role of technology in European history in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The series focuses on how technical communities, nation-states, businesses, social groups, and other actors have contested, projected, performed, and reproduced multiple representations of Europe while constructing and using a range of technologies. The series understands Europe both as an intellectual construct and material practice in relation to spaces inside as well as outside Europe. In particular, the series invites studies focusing on Europe’s (former) colonies and on the two new superpowers of the twentieth century: the United States of America and the Soviet Union. Interdisciplinary work is welcomed. The series will offer a platform for scholarly works associated with the Tensions of Europe Network to find their way to a broader audience. For more information on the network and the series, see: www.tensionsofeurope.eu

Books in series

1. Judith Schueler, Materialising identity. The co-construction of the Gotthard Railway and Swiss national identity (Amsterdam, June 2008)

Foundation for the History of Technology

The Foundation for the History of Technology (SHT) aims to develop and commu-

nicate knowledge that increases our understanding of the critical role of technology in the history of the Western world. Since 1988 the foundation has been supporting scholarly research in the history of technology. This has included large-scale national and international research programs and numerous individual projects, many in collaboration with Eindhoven University of Technology. The SHT also coordinates the international research network Tensions of Europe: Technology and the Making of Europe. For more information see: www.histech.nl

Materialising identity The co-construction of the Gotthard Railway and Swiss national identity Judith Schueler

a Amsterdam 2008

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ISBN 978-90-5260-302-5 © 2008, Judith Schueler No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in anyform or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. This publication is made possible by: Eindhoven University of Technology Foundation for the History of Technology Unger-Van Brero Fonds Cover design and typesetting: Ellen Bouma, Alkmaar, the Netherlands Cover: Poster from the Gotthard Railway (1932) Aksant Academic Publishers, p.o. Box 2169, nl-1000 cd Amsterdam, The Netherlands, www.aksant.nl



Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

The fascinating construction history of the late nineteenth-century Gotthard Tunnel reads like a romanticised triumph of humankind over nature. Intellect, correct tools and skilful workers blended in the process of fighting a way through the capricious Swiss mountains. Finally, they built the tunnel, despite years of drawbacks, unexpected geological circumstances, financial crises, and serious doubts whether the tunnel ends would ever meet. As I wrote this dissertation, colleagues, friends and family often drew parallels between writing a book and drilling a tunnel. To me, it always seemed both a temptingly apt and a dangerously depressing metaphor. I hoped that mention of my ‘tunnel vision’ referred to my work ethos and not to the lack of intellectual breadth. I repeatedly begged that the promised ‘light at the end of the tunnel’ would cast an early, reassuring beam. I incessantly prayed not to gain martyrdom by dying in the process as the tunnel entrepreneur, Louis Favre, did. Moreover, I wished that I would remember all people that helped me in finally triumphing, unlike the anonymous and forgotten Gotthard labourers. Hence, having arrived at the ‘inauguration’ of this book, I want to take the opportunity to thank some institutions and people that played a crucial role in the dissertation process. In 2002, the Society for the History of Technology (SHOT) kindly awarded me the Melvin Kranzberg Fellowship that financially allowed me to conduct research in Switzerland. I want to thank the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) for their travel grant that enabled the continuation of this research in 2003. I also want to express my gratitude to the group of Technikgeschichte at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich for their hospitality during my stay as a visiting scholar in Spring 2004. The scholars of the Algemene Wetenschappen group of the Eindhoven University of Technology, the Foundation for the History of Technology, the N.W. Posthumus Research School and the Tensions of Europe Network offered me an academically challenging and very friendly environment in which to work. Finally, I want to thank the personnel of the Swiss National Library and the SBB Historic (Heritage Foundation of the Swiss Federal Railways) for tirelessly bringing me hundreds of Gotthard books and documents.

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My supervisors, Johan Schot and Dick van Lente, played an essential role in, competently, patiently and responsively, teaching me how to become a historian of technology. Donna Mehos played innumerable roles, among which understanding officemate, supportive counsellor and critical proofreader. Alec Badenoch volunteered to unravel some impossible German quotes. They deserve my explicit acknowledgement in this preface. Yet, I take full responsibility for the mistakes I made despite their kind assistance. During the making of this book, I read and wrote at desks in Maastricht, Bern, Berlin, Eindhoven, Barcelona, Zurich, Amsterdam, Munich, Guelph and The Hague. I want to thank sincerely my colleagues and friends near all these places for surrounding me with their true friendship, encouragement and indispensable victuals. You know who you are and so do I. Remarkably, I wrote not a single word of this book in Barneveld, Utrecht or Le Robert. Here my families lovingly offered me rare dissertation-free zones, never doubting my capacity to finish the work elsewhere. ‘Bedankt’ and ‘merci’ for always being there for me. Notwithstanding my wanderings, there is one place where I decided to stay: close to my soul mate and husband, who gave me the confidence to finalise this work. Den Haag, January 31, 2008

‘Farewell drawing’ offered to me by Alec Badenoch when I left Eindhoven

Table of contents

Introduction: The Gotthard as a national image  9 Two aspects of the Gotthard  13 Gotthard as a major railway project  14 Gotthard as geographical space  23 Studying identity and technology as co-construction  27 The Gotthard Railway as a lens  32 1 National building practices at stake  35 Engineering practices as a lens  36 Drilling the Gotthard Tunnel  39 Visiting the tunnel in 1874  41 Nationalist start of the dispute  45 Restoring the public façade   48 Engineer voices  50 Swiss tunnelling in retrospect  54 Swiss engineering practices   55 2 Celebrating the Gotthard Railway  59 Looking through the lens of events  61 Celebrating the Gotthard Railway  64 Annihilating the Alps  66 Civilisation and technology  71 Bringing the news  72 Annihilation of past and future  73 Specifying the ‘Alps’  75 Alpine sublime  76 Breaching through the Swiss nation landscape  77 Positioning Switzerland  79 Negotiated willingness to change  80

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3 Travelling the Gotthard  83 Through the lens of travel guides  84 Inviting tourists to the Gotthard  87 Left and right of the railway: the Gotthard as a destination  90 To the ‘Urschweiz’  92 A technological and natural sublime  93 Wassen; the Gotthard as a roller coaster  96 Göschenen; the last stop before the tunnel   98 The realm of the mail coach vs. enlightenment of the tunnel  100 “Italy!”   103 The Gotthard Railway as experiencing Switzerland  106 The Gotthard railway as a Swiss experience   109 4 Re-writing history   115 Literature as a lens for studying technology and culture  116 Switzerland’s withdrawal to Heimat and Gotthard  117 Gotthard as a focal point  119 The Gotthard as homeland  122 Gotthard as Heimat  123 Gotthard as a mystic home  126 Projecting Heimat onto the Gotthard  129 Drilling for freedom  129 Favre’s combat with the Gotthard  132 The co-construction of Swiss identity and the Gotthard Tunnel  134 Conclusion   139 The Gotthard: metaphoric synthesis of tensions  140 National identity and its ‘bricoleurs’  143 Revisiting the Gotthard myth  144 Internationality nationalised  146 Epilogue  151 Endnotes  157 Bibliography  185 Summary  195



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

Introduction The Gotthard as a national image

The research for this book developed after I noticed something remarkable. It started as a sequence of observations that gradually expanded into research questions and a research strategy. By expressing my curiosity-driven enthusiasm in this introduction, I want to present the Gotthard as a fascinating topic of study. This introduction reflects upon the research process and makes the reader familiar with the topic in the same gradual way as I did. Sharing memories of my first encounters with the Gotthard image will bring us to various places in Switzerland, where the Gotthard recurs as a reference to different periods in Swiss history. The introduction offers many faces of the Gotthard, evokes many questions and risks being confusing. Yet, this elusiveness makes the ‘Gotthard’ an exiting and worthy topic of academic research. The three sections of this introduction address the main phases of my project. First, I will describe images of the Gotthard in the Kunsthaus of Zurich and the Verkehrshaus in Lucerne, from which this research germinated. After having developed sensitivity to the Gotthard’s images, they seemed to be everywhere. This led me on a search to learn more about the richness of the Gotthard’s history and its symbolic meaning in Swiss society – the second stage of the project. Finally, I realised that despite the many existing studies on the Gotthard, the relationship between the Gotthard as a railway project and the Gotthard as a mythical geographical space has received little attention in scholarly research. From this insight, I developed my own research. Image 1, Zurich Switzerland: The art museum, Kunsthaus, exhibits a painting entitled Der Gotthardpost. The painting depicts a yellow-and-black horse-drawn mail coach that descends the winding southern Gotthard pass road at full speed. A herd of cows obstructs the coach. A calf from the herd – frightened by the speed of the coach – jumps frantically out off the way. One of Switzerland’s most famous painters, Rudolf Koller (1828-1905), painted it in the 1870s. In the museum, the painting figures next to other highlights of Swiss nineteenth and twentieth-century art works of, for example, Ferdinand Hodler and Johann Heinrich Füssli. Rumour

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has it that Koller himself disliked his creation, but the museum presents it as a successful Swiss interpretation of international realism and animal painting. Over the years, Koller’s painting grew in popularity. According to the museum’s website, Der Gotthardpost is one of the most often reproduced images in Switzerland.1 In 1873, the Swiss railway company Nordostbahn commissioned Rudolf Koller to make a painting for the founder of the company and departing director, Alfred Escher. Escher left the Nordostbahn to become the director of the newly founded

Rudolf Koller, Der Gotthardpost, 1873. (c) 2008 Kunsthaus Zürich. All rights reserved



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

Gotthard Railway Company (Gotthardbahngesellschaft). This private company coordinated the construction of a railway line from the city of Zurich to the Italian border, to facilitate a transnational link between the German and the Italian railway networks through the Swiss Alps. The tunnel under the Gotthard Mountains counted as the technologically most challenging aspect of this undertaking. In reference to Escher’s new position, Koller chose the Gotthard horse-drawn mail coach as a theme for this commissioned work. The Gotthard Tunnel would be built right underneath the Gotthard Pass, an important Swiss alpine passage at the time. The painting calls upon associations that exceed artful representation. The museum praises the painting as an allegory that draws attention to the acceleration of modern life. The speed of the coach (alluding to technology) disturbs the slow pace of the cowherd (alluding to nature). It comments on the new Gotthard Railway that succeeded the era of the old horse-drawn mail coach on the pass. Regardless of the coach’s relative speed, it would lose its monopoly to the new and faster mode of transport through the Alps. Despite the invisibility of the tunnel on the painting, Koller’s representation of the Gotthardpost remains associated with the construction of the Gotthard Railway and its tunnel. The Gotthard mail coach figures high in the list of the Swiss ‘canon’ of national images. It appeals to a sense of Swiss identity. The website of the Kunsthaus explains: “The Gotthard symbolises the sublime of nature that accumulates in an allegory of national features. It allows an understanding of the Heimat that reaches beyond the landscape into a social and political self-image.”2 With this sentence, the website links the appreciation of the painting directly with a sense of Swiss (political) national identity as it refers to natural sublime, alpine landscapes, cows, a mail coach and trains. Yet, the full meaning of the sentence was lost on me because it provoked more questions than it answered. Once seen in the museum, copies of the painting caught my eye everywhere. At the entrance of the Swiss National Museum in Zurich, visitors pass an original Gotthard mail coach.3 In the same city, a stand with picture postcards almost certainly sells a card with an image of Der Gotthardpost. Souvenir shops sell reproductions on posters, cups, plates and t-shirts. The polyvocality of the image impressed me as much as its omnipresence. Image 2, Lucerne, Switzerland: The Museum of Transport, Verkehrshaus der Schweiz, counts as one of Switzerland’s most popular museums. It aims at presenting the highlights of the past, present and future of Swiss transportation technologies. Yearly, thousands of national and international visitors acquaint themselves

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Picture of the Gotthard Tunnel Show in the Swiss Museum of Transport. (c) Verkehrshaus Stefan Wäfler 2008

with Swiss showcases of technological pride. The museum – once conceived as a railway museum – prominently displays relics of Switzerland’s railway past.4 The Gotthard Railway occupies a large part of the museum’s railway section. Since the museum’s opening in 1959, a large scale-model of the Gotthard Railway’s northern mountain slopes with the helical tunnels marks the entrance to the museum’s railway section.5 Moreover, several old Gotthard locomotive engines shine in the museum’s largest hall. Here, the Gotthard recurs as a railway that triumphed over nature, by powerful locomotives, and clever bridges and tunnels for crossing the Alps. In 1998, the ‘Gotthard Show’ opened it doors as a visitor’s magnet for the museum. The 150th anniversary of Switzerland’s first railway line, in 1997, formed the immediate cause for developing this new show about the Gotthard Tunnel construction. In 1847, the first railway line in Switzerland ran from the city of Baden to Zurich. The start of the Gotthard Railway construction – 25 years later – is unrelated to the initial railway. Still, the museum decided to use the Gotthard Tunnel construction as a worthy highlight of 150 years of Swiss railway history. Almost 15 kilometreslong, the tunnel under the Gotthard Mountains was, until 1906, the longest one in the world.6 In the Gotthard Tunnel Show, speaking life-size dolls revive scenes of the construction sites around 1878. During the 9.5-year construction period



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

(1872-1882), workers, engineers and entrepreneurs dealt with many unforeseen problems, as the show illustrates. The museum visitor playfully learns about the social and technological struggles that marked tunnelling the Gotthard in the late nineteenth century. The website of the museum kindly invites people to experience the show as ‘a didactical visit to the nineteenth-century construction site’. The show offers a history that stands out in comparison to the displays of the Gotthard locomotives and swirling miniature trains in the model. It tells more than a story of the triumph of humankind over nature. It notes critically the deplorable circumstances under which the (Italian) workers constructed the tunnel. Moreover, the website advertises the show as a ‘travel straight through the heart of Switzerland’. The text describes the strategic importance of the Gotthard Railway for Switzerland as the reason why soon after the railway was completed, work began on the construction of a Gotthard fortress for the Swiss Army. Thus, it became “for many generations of Swiss a symbol for the defiant independence of the nation”.7 The website text links the history of the Gotthard Railway to a geo-political history that surpasses the railways as a technological tour de force. The Gotthard show in Lucerne, reminded me of Koller’s painting Der Gotthardpost in the museum in Zurich. Both museums display the Gotthard as a visitors’ magnet, yet they present them in two different contexts. Despite clear contrasts, they apparently provoke similar associations. For me, unfamiliar with the ‘Gotthard’, their references to a Swiss national image remained unclear. I needed the added texts to point out the additional layers of sentiments, tacit links and invisible allusions. What does this Gotthard image evoke? How do a painting of a mail coach, an exhibition of a tunnel and associations with Swiss national identity relate to each other? What makes it such a powerful Swiss national image? How have people used these Gotthard images and for what purposes? More than the displays themselves, their cryptic additional texts awoke a curiosity in me for understanding this Gotthard image fully.

Two aspects of the Gotthard My inquisitiveness led to a search for narratives on the Gotthard which proved easier to start than to end. A broad range of literature touches upon the subject of the Gotthard, ranging from listings of Gotthard locomotive engines to reflections on the Gotthard as a myth.8 Second hand bookstores sell Gotthard related paraphernalia; sometimes as expensive collectors’ items or cheaply because there are reprints galore.9 The computers in the Swiss National Library give hundreds of hits

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for the keyword ‘Gotthard’ and the archives of the Swiss Federal Railway and the National Archives collected many meters of Gotthard Railway sources. The flow of Gotthard-related material – both popular and academic – starts in the eighteenth century with some rare travel accounts and continues until today.10 The amount and diversity of material give an idea how the Gotthard kept writers, engineers, historians, tourists, politicians and many others busy throughout the centuries. In an attempt to order the material, I distinguished roughly two types of literature. First, a broad range of material presents the Gotthard as a railway project, in which the ‘Gotthard’ equals the Gotthard Railway. The material aspects of the Gotthard receive most attention, both in primary and secondary sources. Second, the literature describes the Gotthard as the Gotthard Mountains and its pass through the Swiss Alpine chain. References to this Gotthard can be found in popular literature about the history of the Gotthard Pass, but – surprisingly – also in academic works about Swiss national identity. These technological and spatial storylines constitute two different perspectives on the Gotthard, which both have developed their own dynamic. Hence, I will describe the Gotthard as a railway project and as a geographical space. Of course, my distinction is rough because these storylines unavoidably feed into each other and become linked to numerous other elements in Swiss history and society. How these storylines interacted will be subject to later deliberations.

Gotthard as a major railway project The literature on the construction of the Gotthard Railway explicates the important role given to this railway line in Swiss history. Since the opening of the Gotthard Railway in 1882, various writers have written down its history. In 1882 and 1885, Martin Wanner, archivist of the Gotthard Railway Company, published the first two detailed histories about the line’s construction.11 Later, the jubilee years of the Gotthard Railway and of the Swiss railways inspired historians to (re-) new(ed) publications.12 Over the years, an increasingly standardised history about the Gotthard Railway construction developed with particular highlights and accents. This history entered the general textbooks and history books in Switzerland as an important milestone in late nineteenth-century Swiss history. In time, new and critical perspectives have altered the emphases of the narratives and added new elements to the history of the Gotthard Railway. The book Kohle, Strom und Schienen, published by the Museum of Transport, reveals how myths mingled with facts in the Gotthard’s dominant storylines. Moreover, historians have largely ignored certain aspects of the construction, such as a social history of the workers. The articles illustrate how the development of a standardised



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

history about the Gotthard Railway construction coloured the appreciation of the Gotthard line in Swiss society. Still, the legacy of the existing body of literature resounds in new publications.13 Critically evaluated or not, I discerned four central elements that form the basic building blocks of the Gotthard Railway’s accepted history. Using these elements, I will discuss the historiography in connection with the history of the Gotthard Railway. The first building block of the railway’s history is the parallel construction of the Swiss nation state and the Gotthard Railway. The secondary literature considers the political negotiation processes before, during and after the construction phase as an integral part of the history. It describes the realisation of the Gotthard Railway as the outcome of diplomatic as well as technological hardship. Railway historians praise Swiss politicians for their pioneering work in the development of the Swiss railways.14 Since historians have understood railway development as a highly political affair, they also describe how changing power relations within the relatively young Swiss nation state are recreated in the physical development of the railway grid. In 1847, when the first railway line on Swiss soil opened, the discussions about the future of Switzerland took violent forms. In 1848, the victors of a short civil war promulgated a new constitution from which the Swiss federal state was born. Before that moment, Switzerland existed as a loose confederation of sovereign cantons. In the war, multiple visions of ideal Swiss futures collided.15 The so-called seven Sonderbund cantons, mainly catholic, conservative and rural, fought the radical party, that promoted liberalism based on mainly Protestant and urban ideologies. The Sonderbund opposed the tendency to support the unification of the Swiss cantons under the umbrella of a (liberal) national government. In the armed conflict it ignited, its opposition stood no chance. Soon, the seven allied cantons had to accept their defeat and the winners brought them under the rule of the new constitution. In the new political system, the cantonal powers entrusted the national government with many of their responsibilities even though they maintained some sovereignty. In the second half of the century, powers in Switzerland had to find new balances amidst existing animosities. This period of nation state building also marked a renewed search for establishing relations with neighbouring countries.16 The newly installed liberal government aimed to modernise Switzerland rapidly. To do so, it would realise Swiss railway development and thereby open up to Europe. Germany, Italy, France and Austria rapidly expanded their national railway networks. Plans to construct an international railway line through Switzerland originated with railway developments both inside and outside of Switzerland. A speech from the influential politician and

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advocate of railway development Alfred Escher forms a starting point for many Gotthard Railway histories. In 1849, in his capacity as newly elected president of the national parliament, Escher summoned the Swiss Federal Council to prevent Switzerland from becoming a European island (Einsiedelei). He urged the development of a Swiss railway network integrated within the international one.17 Escher realised the importance of an international railway axis through the Alps to preserve Switzerland’s role as a transit country. His words, in retrospect, gained visionary status as Escher would later become the president of the Gotthard Railway Company. In the discussion about a possible railway line through Switzerland, the power relationships between the national government, the cantons and influential industrialists crystallised. Clarity about decision making power and financing railway projects was lacking. In 1850, the Swiss Federal Council took action as it anticipated the development of a Swiss railway network under state rule. It ordered two famous English railway experts, Henry Swineburne and Robert Stephenson, to design a national railway grid. With regard to an international transit through the Alps, the experts concluded that the state of the art in tunnelling did not suffice to construct the required alpine tunnel. If engineers could build a transit in the future, they favoured a tunnel under the Lukmanier Pass in the east of Switzerland.18 In 1852, however, the Swiss national government decided to delegate railway matters to the cantons. The national government did not have the power, financial strength and engineering expertise to manage centrally Swiss railway development. This decision rendered the existing plans for a national grid obsolete. From 1852 onward, the cantonal governments sold railway concessions to private enterprises, which resulted in regionalised developments of railway lines supported by private, regional and cantonal interests. This new division of responsibilities also influenced the discussion about the construction of an international transit route, with its necessary tunnel through the Alps. Such a major project surpassed the interests and abilities of the individual cantons because of its geo-political importance and the financial investments required. Yet, regional interests and the power of influential individuals marked the continuing debate. Different groups of politicians and engineers designed plans, wrote pamphlets and started negotiation processes not only with other Swiss regions and cities but also with parties outside of Switzerland. After almost 20 years of ‘tunnel battles’, none of the groups found strong enough political and financial support to actually start the building process. The eastern part of Switzerland fought fervently for the favoured tunnel under the Lukmanier Pass. For a long time the Lukmanier proponents held the strongest cards, whereas the other variants such as the Simplon,



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

Splügen or Gotthard tunnel obtained less support.19 The continuing debates about an international transit mirrored the tensions in the young nation state. Historians of the Gotthard Railway value differently the second building block of the storyline – international politics. They accentuate the influence of international politics in the construction of the Gotthard Railway in various ways.20 The question remains whether the Swiss actors in the negotiation processes should be praised for gaining international support for a Swiss transit axis, or whether their success illustrates how easily major powers profited from their relatively weak, though politically neutral, neighbour, Switzerland. Most histories agree that railway developments in neighbouring countries urged Swiss politicians to act, but they disagree about the significance of this international pressure. The internationalisation of trade increased the strategic importance of international railway axes. The Austrians opened passages over the Semmering (1848- 1854) and Brenner (1867).21 The Italian government ordered the construction of the Mont Cenis tunnel (1857-1871) that would give Italy a direct rail connection from Lyon to Turin.22 Plans for new transit lines through the Alps surpassed national concerns; they touched upon economic and geo-political interests of many other countries in Europe. In the second half of the nineteenth century, the changing political and economic situation in Europe shifted the interests for a new international axis. Switzerland’s ongoing negotiations with England and France about financing a Swiss Alpine tunnel remained fruitless because the construction of the Mont Cenis Tunnel served the interests of France and England for obtaining a connection to the Italian harbours. In contrast, the enthusiasm of some German and Italian regions increased. The unification of Italy, in the course of the 1860s, and the allocation of Savoy to France and of Venice to Italy changed the international interests in a Swiss transit. The German industrial Ruhr Area developed into an economically powerful region that desired a direct link to the rapidly developing northern Italian economic and industrial centres around Milan. Germany hoped to transport its coal to the Italian industries and ship it further from the Italian harbours; Italy needed a direct line to Germany to support its Po industries. These new European powers wanted to posses an alpine crossing over neutral ground, to circumvent France and Austria-Hungary. The most direct link between the two centres passed through the Gotthard Mountains. Escher catalysed the process in Switzerland by putting his cards explicitly on the Gotthard Tunnel. He realised that a Swiss tunnel project would be impossible without foreign support. Since Italy and some German states favoured a

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Gotthard Tunnel, Escher shifted his support and became an active proponent of the Gotthard Tunnel, whereas, previously, he had supported the Lukmanier.23 At the time, Escher’s political and economic influence in Swiss society peaked. He was a former member of the governments of Zurich and of the National Council, president of the board of directors of the Nordostbahn and the Credit Swiss bank.24 Escher’s shift meant the loss of an essential support for the Lukmanier Tunnel. In 1866, after he became involved in serious negotiations between Swiss, Italian and German delegates, foreign governments officially expressed their interest in the Gotthard Tunnel to the Swiss government. The explicit support from the foreign states meant that the Swiss national government could openly back-up one single tunnel project – the Gotthard.25 The Swiss national government became involved in the private initiative because of the magnitude and international importance of the Gotthard Railway project. In 1869, Emil Welti, the Swiss Federal Councillor, chaired an international conference with the states involved to discuss the conditions for building the Gotthard Railway. The participants in the conference discussed the division of managerial responsibilities, the financial structure and the basic technical requirements. The representatives also had the final say in the technical norms (such as gauge, masonry, bridges and tunnels).26 The conference’s protocol defined the nine-year construction period based on earlier studies commissioned by the predecessors of Gotthard Railway Company.27 This company coordinated the construction and exploitation of the railways. However, the representatives decided to give the Swiss Federal Council supervision and decision making power should problems arise during construction.28 This constellation forced the Swiss national government to play a central role. September 15, 1869, Italy, Switzerland and the German States signed the treaty.29 In 1871, after the unification of Germany, Chancellor of the German Empire Otto von Bismarck (re)signed it on behalf of Germany. The railway construction required 85 million Swiss Francs of state subventions. Italy financed the lion share with 45 million Swiss Francs. Both Switzerland and Germany paid 20 million. Swiss cantons and cities collectively paid the Swiss share of the subvention. The Gotthard Railway Company added another 102 million Swiss Francs based on private capital (one-third in shares, two-third in bonds).30 In 1871, the Berliner Disconto Company organised the private finances. In 1872, the emission of the bonds proved extremely successful, a million bonds came in the hands of small investors in Germany and Switzerland.31 These public and private investors enabled the construction of the international railways axis through the Swiss Alps to commence.



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

Illustration based on a brochure of the Gotthard Railway in 1904. Courtesy Schulmuseum Bern, Köniz

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The international dimension also tells a story about the increasing power of nation states. It is questionable whether the breakthrough in the negotiation process would have been possible without the force of the unified nation states. The descriptions of the vehement discussions and events in 1877 and 1878 emphasise this point. In that period, the railway crisis hit several Swiss railway companies, including the Gotthard Railway Company that faced a deep financial crisis. Soon after the start of the Gotthard Railway construction, it became clear that the budget would not suffice. Around 1876, the financial crisis escalated and Escher had to admit to the Swiss National Council that an additional 102 million Swiss Francs would be needed to save the Gotthard Railway. The Swiss government tried to convince Germany and Italy to subsidise more. In 1877, it organised a second international conference for additional financial support. The participants in the conference decided to cut some of the access lines. Still, 40 million Swiss Francs were required to finalise the work. The Swiss government promised to provide eight. The Swiss cantons that had contributed to the first round of subsidies refused to pay additional subventions. In Switzerland, the debate between the cantons started again. However, the role of the Swiss nation state increased throughout the period of the Gotthard Railway construction; the new laws of 1874 gave more power to the national government. Finally, the Swiss national government decided to support the private Gotthard Railway Company with 4.5 million Swiss Francs (the remaining 2 million had to come from the cantons that subsidised the first round). It could only give this support by promising that future tunnel projects would receive an equal amount of state subsidy. Even though it solved the problem, Escher took the blame for the financial crisis and resigned as director. The vice-president, Josef Zingg (1828-1891), became his successor.32 These developments demonstrate a change in power relationships in Switzerland where the influence of individuals, such as Escher, diminished while the power of the national government grew. The third building block of the Gotthard Railway history is the technical aspects of its construction and material aspects of its exploitation. The transnational axis was constructed on Swiss territory, with some additional access lines in Italy. The new part of the Gotthard route ran from the little village Immensee to the Italian border at Chiasso. Basel, at the Swiss border with Germany, formed the node between Zurich and the railway network of the western part of Germany. The tourist resort Lucerne would construct the second planned chief station of the Gotthard Railway. From Chiasso, the Italian railway network fanned out to Milan, Naples, Rome and Genoa and other harbours of the Mediterranean. The Gotthard Railway Company divided the work in five sections: Lucerne-Erstfeld; Erstfeld-Göschenen;



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

Göschenen-Airolo (tunnel); Airolo-Biasca; Biasca-Bellizona-Chiasso. The route included the construction of numerous new stations, bridges and tunnels. The mountainous parts of the tracks between Erstfeld and Biasca required the largest and most challenging engineering projects such as the bridging of major differences in height and natural obstacles. The biggest project and name giver of the railways formed the Gotthard Tunnel with its length of 14.9 kilometres. In the histories, the technological endeavours of the Gotthard Railway gained heroic proportions. Most stories focus almost solely on the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel that required tunnelling through unknown rock formations.33 The ultimate success of the Gotthard Railway as a transit axis encouraged some to write a technological success story.34 A legendary history developed that hardly left space for negative aspects of the construction and exploitation of the railways. The superlatives with which historians have surrounded the history of the tunnel construction cast a shadow on the rest of the railway project.35 A fourth, and last, building block of the Gotthard history is comprised of a few ‘heroes’ involved in the construction. Storylines emphasise the construction of the Gotthard Railway as the work of many people but they highlight two individuals, namely Alfred Escher and Louis Favre.36 Histories portray Escher as the rich and influential political force behind the Gotthard Railway construction who guarded the relationships with the ‘outside world’. Historians either admire him for his role in the construction of the Swiss state or despise him as an authoritarian, un-democratic ‘railway baron’.37 His exit from the stage as a scapegoat for the financial crisis marked the dramatic end to his career. He died just after the finalisation of the railways in 1882. Louis Favre, manager of the Tunnel Company, plays Escher’s counterpart in many histories. As the story goes, he was born into a simple family in the French-speaking part of Switzerland. He built up his career in France. About his life few ‘facts’ are known, but he is described as a warm personality and hard worker. His determination to build the tunnel made him sign a contract to finish the construction in eight years. He died of a heart attack during a tunnel inspection, several months before the breakthrough, in July 1879. Regardless of the normative evaluation of both Favre and Escher, the focus on their personalities overemphasises their role in the railway’s construction. Only recently, social histories show the hardship of the Gotthard labourers in and outside of the tunnel. Thousands of workers and their families, the majority of them from Italy, sought work in the tunnel and the workers’ villages north and south of the tunnel. The little villages, Göschenen and Airolo, could barely facilitate the influx of people. Therefore, they lived in barracks or shared beds with each other,

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Philipp Fleischer, Schichtwechsel beim Bau des Gotthard-Tunnels, 1886. Courtesy Deutsches Historisches Museum, Berlin

taking shifts. Many of the workers returned home ill or handicapped and approximately two hundred died of diseases or accidents in the tunnel. They go down in history as the anonymous heroes of the tunnel construction. The strike in the summer of 1875 is the only event in which the workers receive explicit attention in the storylines. On July 27, the workers refused to enter the tunnel because of unbearable circumstances inside. Armed forces broke the uproar violently: they shot two workers and wounded several others. In the end, the work continued with little improvement in the working conditions.38 This small episode does not make up for the overpowering attention devoted to the life and work of the two main heroes. The four building blocks outlined above constitute the foundation of many histories of the Gotthard Railway. The increasingly standardised view of the Gotthard Railway’s past offers one insight into the representation of the ‘Gotthard’ in Swiss national history. It stresses the magnitude of the technological project as well as its importance for the development of Switzerland as a young nation that had to position itself within the European powers as a transit country for European traffic. Moreover, the storylines situate the construction in a period in which the Swiss nation state grew in power. On the wave of success of the Gotthard Railway exploitation, its heroes grew to be national heroes, marking both Swiss political and entrepreneurial power.



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

Gotthard as geographical space The focus on the Gotthard as a major railway project matches the focus on the Gotthard as an important geographical space in the Alps. In this latter body of literature, the Gotthard as a mountain massif predominates. The literature also shows how this Gotthard grew out to be a symbolic space in Switzerland and as an icon of Swiss national identity. Popular books on the Gotthard bear suggestive titles: ‘The Gotthard myth’ (2003), ‘It started at the Gotthard’ (2001), ‘Gotthard, the stone soul of Switzerland’ (1997), ‘The Gotthard: Switzerland’s life-line’ (1979), ‘The Gotthard, a very remarkable history of the mountain that has borne a state’ (1958).39 Below, I will discuss the dominant themes in this literature. The first theme I identified in the popular literature is how it reconstructs the Gotthard history as a succession of metamorphoses of the passage point, in such a way that the passage’s importance over time seems uncontested. The route through the Gotthard Mountains became accessible in the 13th century and it grew in importance for interregional trade north and south of the Alpine barrier. In time, people adapted this early road to the requirements of international traffic. From a simple footpath, it was made accessible for mules and later, in the early nineteenth century, the canton of Uri financed a road fit for coaches. A picture of the Gotthardpost figures prominently in these books. The construction of the Gotthard Railway with its tunnel under the existing Gotthard Pass made the passage suitable for the train traffic. The storylines continue with the increased motorisation in the mid-twentieth century which gave the Gotthard Pass new impetus. Car traffic enforced renewed modernisation of the pass route, completed in the late 1950s. Yet again, the new road and car-train system could not facilitate the rapidly increasing flow of international traffic. In 1969, the construction of a car tunnel started that opened in 1980. Thus, in these narratives, the history of the Gotthard Pass follows the linear development of many technological progressivist transport histories. The second theme is the description of the Alpine passage as the locus of symbols, legends and myths. Whereas the history of the Gotthard Railway construction tells the story of a modernising, liberal-protestant state, the history of the Gotthard Pass describes a local history, full of catholic elements. As the legend goes, the pass and the mountain region are named after the Saint Godehard von Hildesheim. This bishop – canonized in 1131 – allegedly performed miracles on the pass and therefore a Catholic order founded a chapel there.40 The books add texts and illustrations to remind the reader of the pass’ function as a refuge run by monks who gave shelter to forlorn travellers. As a result, authors from a catholic background often refer to the Saint Gotthard Mountains. Many other historical

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events recur in these histories but the most well known legend is that about the construction of the Devil’s Bridge. The bridge over the steep Schöllenen Gorge made the Gotthard Pass accessible as a trade route. A book about the Gotthard without a picture or painting of the Devil’s Bridge is hardly conceivable. The image usually pictures the bridge over the untameable River Reuss that wildly flows through the narrow gorge. The legend tells how the Devil helped the villagers to construct the new bridge overnight. Of course, the Devil made the villagers pay a price for his aid: he demanded the soul of the first being that crossed the bridge. The Devil kept his word and built the bridge. To pay their debt to the Devil the villagers pushed a goat over the new bridge. The Devil, angered by this smart move, picked up a large stone to destroy his creation. However, the stone missed its target, because an old woman quickly prayed the Hail Mary (or made the sign of the cross — the storylines differ). Today, travellers can still admire the stone at the entrance of the pass, where it landed.41 A painting on the rocks close to the contemporary bridge depicts the goat and the Devil. A third recurring and worldlier theme of the Gotthard’s space is its strategic power. Since the opening of the pass, people realised the strategic geographical position of the Gotthard and ultimately it led to the foundation of the early Swiss confederation.42 Controlling the access to the Gotthard passage wielded such power for the regions north of the Alps that they agreed to defend it with united forces. In the thirteenth century, the regions Schwyz, Uri and Unterwalden signed the first agreement. Later, the Swiss would celebrate this event as the birth of the Swiss confederation, sometimes also referred to as Gotthardstaat. The Gotthard Mountains formed a natural defence line against foreign powers, which, in time, have been up-graded with a human-made complex network of corridors and bunkers that served as a military stronghold in case of war. Before the Second World War, the Gotthard even became the ultimate military bulwark of Swiss defence. 43 The fourth, more ‘impressionistic’, theme in these books about the Gotthard captures its sublime alpine nature. The Gotthard Mountains recur as a geographically interesting (and divine) phenomenon. From the Gotthard, several waters flow that constitute major European rivers, such as the Rhone, Po and Rhine. Moreover, the Gotthard represents, according to some, the core of the complete Alpine mountain chain. From these observations, early naturalists deducted that the Gotthard Mountains must constitute the highest mountain massif in Europe. Even though the Mont Blanc turned out to be much higher, many of the books still attribute a symbolic geographical importance to the Gotthard. Moreover, the Gotthard



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

Mountains feature a beautifully raw high-alpine nature. Texts and especially illustrations try to capture the Gotthard’s natural sublime.44 In the representation of the landscape, the Gotthard pass road plays a central role with its bridges, curves and buildings alongside. The northern valley is characterised by steep grey mountain walls and turbulent waters. Toward the south, the nineteenth-century curving road typifies the landscape pictures. The representations do not deny the human presence around the Gotthard; human constructs fit seamlessly with the expressed pride to have tamed nature throughout the ages. The books also see the Gotthard Pass as a milestone in the history of the Swiss nation state that would be inconceivable without the construction of bridges and alpine passages.45 This brings us to academic literature that analyses the power of the Gotthard images for Switzerland. The work of the journalist and Germanist Helmut Stalder bridges the two types of literatures on the Gotthard’s symbolic meaning. He writes: “The Gotthard is an idea, a mental construction. It is a myth (…) The Gotthard is a mountain pass, of course, but the Gotthard becomes the ‘Gotthard’ through the meaning people give it”.46 According to Stalder, the Gotthard became a reference point for the Swiss self-image. Numerous academic reflections on the construction of Swiss national identity discuss the Gotthard as its symbol closely related to the symbolic value of the Alps for Switzerland. The Gotthard myth grew especially potent before and during the Second World War.47 The historian Oliver Zimmer notes: “Perhaps the symbolic value of the Alps found its clearest expression in the attitude of the Swiss population towards its army’s defence (…). [T]he army’s strategy consisted of building a defensive ring around the Gotthard.”48 The medievalist Guy Marchal questions why only the Swiss created a politicised alpine image and a mythical Gotthard.49 He is one of the few historians who studied in depth the construction of the Gotthard as a national image. He found references to the Gotthard from medieval times through the heyday of the Gotthard imagery in the twentieth century. Marchal explains the Gotthard myth as part of the general development of the Swiss Alpine myth in the construction of Swiss identity. Marchal’s valuable arguments give us insight into the mechanisms that helped to construct the Gotthard image as an icon of national identity, which I will discuss here. Fifteenth-century texts from foreign visitors to the Alps portray the Swiss people as rude and backward mountain dwellers. The Alps play a central, though negative, role in their descriptions of the Swiss. References to the Gotthard Mountains rarely occur. Rather, the writers centralise the Mountain Rigi, located close to the

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city of Lucerne. In the sixteenth century, naturalists paid increasing attention to the Gotthard Mountains as they noted the hydrographical uniqueness of the Gotthard as a source of seven rivers. These descriptions incorporated the Swiss Alps in European geography and drew more attention to the Gotthard Mountains. In the eighteenth century, references to the Gotthard Mountains increased. Swiss scholars, such as Johann Jakob Scheuchzer, characterised ‘the true Swiss inhabitant’ as an ideal Alpine resident whose moral fibre was marked by the rough Alpine climate. Scheuchzer considered the Alps the birth ground of the modest and honest Swiss homo alpinus, thus giving the mountains a positive moral connotation. Scheuchzer’s work inspired other scholars during the Swiss Enlightenment. Through their work, the Alps became a key element that constructed the character of the Swiss people as captured in the motto ex alpibus salus patriae (from the Alps comes our country’s salvation).50 As in earlier centuries, the Gotthard played a central role as the source of European river system; in Scheuchzer’s words ‘the ultimate top of the water castle of Europe’. Taken together, enlightenment scholars located the origin of the Swiss people on the Gotthard heights.51 As the idea for a Swiss nation state developed in the nineteenth century, intellectuals integrated the Gotthard imagery into Swiss identity through the strong focus on the Alpine myth. They constructed a Swiss identity that emphasised Alpine nature as the moral foundation for the Swiss state: based on liberty and human rights. In contrast to some other emerging European nation states, Swiss ideologists defined their country as small yet harbouring four different cultures and languages. To legitimize Switzerland’s existence as a nation state, they did not make claims of a common language or ethnicity. Instead, the Alps bound the Swiss people together. Here again, the Gotthard Mountains formed the heart of this politicised Alpine myth. Marchal cites Gonzague de Reynold, a French-speaking Swiss writer and historian: “The importance of the Saint Gotthard is that of a grand gate in a city (…) it is geographical, political and military.”52 Marchal mentions that the construction of the Gotthard Railway in the late nineteenth century brought heightened attention to the region. Scholars, such as De Reynold and Ernest Bovet, used the Gotthard as a political image. In the early twentieth century, these conservative writers portrayed Switzerland’s role in Europe as the guardian of the Gotthard. Bovet presents the Gotthard as a unifying force for Switzerland in crisis as well as a mediator of European cultures. The official language of the Swiss government took up these images in the eve of the Second World War. Reacting to the power of the image, the Swiss population enthusiastically accepted the government’s plans for a military réduit national at the Gotthard. Making the mountains a stronghold meant that the Swiss army would relinquish industrial centres to the aggressor. As long



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

as the army defended this ‘core of Switzerland’, Switzerland could not be defeated. Marchal sees this period as crucial for the connection of Swiss national identity with the Gotthard Mountains. With his explanation of the Gotthard’s myth construction, Marchal positions the Gotthard as a geographical space that obtained political and symbolic meaning in Switzerland. Within his chosen longue durée perspective, Marchal only shortly touches upon the construction of the Gotthard Railway when he argues that it strengthened the focus on the Gotthard.53 However, he does not study the extent to which the arrival of the railways altered or influenced the value-loaded alpine and Gotthard myth.

Studying identity and technology as co-construction A third phase of my research process started when questions arose from unpretentious observations of Gotthard images in the Swiss cultural landscape and from my rough mapping of the existing literature on the Gotthard. Reading the two parallel literatures about the Gotthard evoked questions about the interaction between those two representations in the light of national identity formation. I wanted to understand the processes that led to the apparent self-evidence with which the Gotthard image calls to mind both technological prowess and Swiss identity. Moreover, I questioned to what extent these different elements touched and influenced each other. I wondered to what extent the construction process of the Gotthard Railway interacted with the construction of the Gotthard as a historically and geographically central place in Switzerland. Did the Swiss question the arrival of the Gotthard Railway into the mythical landscape of the Gotthard? Did the image of the Gotthard myth change after the Gotthard Tunnel was built? Did the cultural importance of the Gotthard influence the political and technological decision-making process of the Gotthard Railway? What is the role of the railways in the Gotthard space? To what extent do the images change over the years? My academic background certainly tainted my first observations of the Gotthard image in Switzerland and the curiosity that I developed from it. During many years of interdisciplinary studies on technological culture and on the history of technology, I developed a special interest in cultural representations of technology in society. I regarded a railway project, by definition, as deeply embedded in a socio-cultural environment. Therefore, it neither surprised me to see references to railway development in nineteenth-century animal painting nor to be confronted with Swiss identity when visiting a tunnel exhibition. My fascination for the Gotthard derived from wanting to understand how different associations

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and storylines became bundled into such a strong Swiss national image – myth even. To this question the existing bodies of literature do not offer an answer. Identity receives increasing attention in historical studies of technology. Studies touch upon the subject, but they do not always set out to study the interrelation explicitly.54 Often, the studies that do find themselves on the cross road between cultural studies and the history of technology. Sara Pritchard, for example, studied diverse Rhone River projects throughout French history. She shows how changing ideas about the French landscape, and thus French identity, influenced the way in which the River Rhone technological projects were presented and received by the French population. Ideas about what the country should look like were rooted in images about French identity and became linked to technological projects. Similarly, Thomas Zeller illustrates how the debate about the Autobahn in Germany during the Nazi Regime showed the co-evolution of a road infrastructure and a new German identity.55 Despite the growing interest, there is no clear-cut methodology available for studying the interrelation between national identity and technological development. The most influential tryout is the study of Gabrielle Hecht on the co-construction of nuclear power and French national identity after the Second World War. She shows how engineers, politicians, workers and villagers intimately, though differently, linked discussions about the reconstruction of a French national identity (grandeur) to the development of nuclear power.56 She develops ‘tools’ for her research. One, she asks: How do the historical actors we study conceptualize the relationship between technology and politics? Hecht shows that by studying discursive practices of historical actors it is possible to analyse the constructed relationships between identity and technology, and explore what was at stake in those conceptualisations. Second, she elaborates the terms technopolitics and technopolitical to analyse the relatively technocratic French national context. Whereas for post-war France these concepts prove adequate, they may not necessarily apply to the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Swiss context. Nevertheless, with Hecht’s clear question, I seem to be able to come a long way. Understanding how historical actors constitute an interlinkage between national identity and technological projects assumes the socially constructed nature of both. Hecht argues that “[o]pening the black boxes of culture and technology simultaneously can give us insight into how technologies constitute a terrain for transforming, enacting, or protesting power relations within the social fabric.”57 Her plea fits into recent developments in technology studies that acknowledge that technology and culture co-evolve, are co-produced, or are mutually constitutive.58 To understand the interaction between technology and culture, not only



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

technology but also culture needs to be understood and explained as a construction. Or, to put it differently: to study the mutual construction of identity and technology both require explanation and research. Talking about co-construction helps us move away from the often blurry a priori distinctions between the social, the cultural and the technical. There is no such distinction between the processes in which people make sense of either their identities or the technologies that surround them. Yet, these are categories in which historical actors think and speak. Therefore, historians should take these discourses seriously. In the last decades, studies on technology have focused the social construction of technology.59 To understand cultural processes, scholars in technology studies embrace cultural studies and argue that the linguistic approach helps them to understand interacting processes of technology and culture. Their basic theoretical framework holds that people make use of language to attribute meaning to their environment and to communicate this to others. As individuals, people have mental representations that help them to give meaning to the world. A shared language allows them to communicate these representations within a certain shared culture. Discourse analyses allow scholars to study these representations. Cultural theorist Stuart Hall defines discourse in Michel Foucault’s terms as both language and practices. In short, discourse can be defined as: A group of statements which provide a language for talking about – a way of representing the knowledge about – a particular topic at a particular historical moment (…). Discourse is about the production of knowledge through language. But (…) since all social practices entail meaning, and meanings shape and influence what we do – or conduct – all practices have a discursive aspect.60 The production of meaning through representations does not deny materiality; it shows that ‘things’ themselves do not have meaning.61 In empirical studies of technology, historians and sociologists of technology pragmatically defend their choice for discourse analysis, without engaging themselves in the complicated theoretical debate taking place in cultural studies.62 Hecht argues that “[t]he linguistic approach need not imply an anti-materialist position. Instead, it can show how the material world both derives meaning from culture and performs culture.”63 Moreover, Paul Edwards emphasises discourse analysis as a method that “goes beyond speech acts to refer to the entire field of signifying or meaningful practices: those social interactions – material, institutional, and linguistic – through which reality is interpreted and constructed for us and with which human knowledge is produced and reproduced.”64 Focussing on the discursive practices of historical actors thus helps scholars to explain the role of technology within society.65

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The cultural production of meaning in society is strongly related to defining individual or collective identity. A ‘constructivist’ approach to national identity formation seems a necessary choice against the background of the intellectual framework just sketched. For her studies on French national identity, Hecht returns to a definition by Benedict Anderson on ‘imagined communities’. Anderson sees nationalism as an expression of an ‘imagined community’, through which people experience a sense of community with people they do not know. For example, sharing the same language creates a feeling of belonging. By reading the same newspapers and books, people can relate to unknown others of the same community. The strength of his work lies in acknowledging that expressions of national identity are imagined constructions.66 Anderson’s work inspired scholars interested in the production of national identity.67 However, Anderson’s focus on the unifying power of language fits uncomfortably with the situation in Switzerland, where four official national languages are spoken within the nation’s boundary. In the last 15 years, reflections on Swiss national identity have intrigued many Swiss historians. The celebrations of ‘700 years of Switzerland’ in 1991 and the 150th jubilee year of the Swiss national government in 1998, gave impetus to the question what binds the Swiss.68 The majority of these, and later, studies focus on the cultural production of meaning in search of the Swiss national identity.69 In contrast to other nations, Swiss historical actors did not define national identity by common ethnicity or language. Instead, Switzerland guarded its cultural diversity and sought elements of unity in its landscape and common history, as described before. The regional (cantonal) identities remained strong without necessarily harming the link to national identity. This characteristic led to the idea that Switzerland was a Sonderfall and incomparable to other countries.70 While scholars recognise the unique outcomes of Swiss cultural identity construction, the processes themselves resemble those elsewhere in Europe. Furthermore, the acknowledgement that regional identity may be maintained in the process of national identity formation characterises a general trend in national identity studies, which focus increasingly on the ambiguous cultural processes with which people construct multiple senses of belonging to both a region and the nation.71 These general developments fit scholars’ contemporary perspectives on Swiss identity formation. In an anthology on Swiss national identity, Guy Marchal and Aram Mattioli offer a theoretical framework from which they study Swiss national identity. Translated into English, it would carry the title: ‘Imagined Switzerland. Constructions of a national identity’.72 As a metaphor to study national identity formation they use the



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

linguistic term ‘bricolage’ referring to national identity as a social construction.73 The term captures the process in which people ‘tinker’ with images to express a mental construction that reverts to the ‘nation’ and that defines identity for those living in a society dominated by nations. To understand this process, the authors propose to analyse collective representations through which people express, see, define or dream their national self-image.74 This way of viewing the articulation of a sense of identity fits with the focus on discursive practices surrounding technologies that I discussed earlier in relation to technology studies. Marchal argues that images, symbols, stereotypes and metaphors form the building blocks with which people can articulate their unique national identity. Although the images can be interpreted in numerous ways, the system of images needs to be recognizable and decodable to make sense. The collective images that people employ have elasticity and can be interpreted in multiple, though not endless ways. Hence, the process always needs to be understood in its specific historical context. There is a pool of existing collective images that can be tinkered with, bent and used that has built up throughout the ages. This explanation of the metaphor of ‘bricolage’ sounds promising for understanding how people in Switzerland did cultural work to link the image of the Gotthard to a chain of other images to constitute a Swiss identity. It is on this socio-cultural level that I want to understand the construction of national identity. For Marchal the ‘bricoleurs’ of national identity were great Swiss thinkers during the Enlightenment. This elite constructed the pool of images from which the Swiss could draw, in later time. He also understands the construction of the Gotthard image as one created by intellectuals. Even though Marchal suggests an open analysis of the cultural discursive process, he does not regard discourses surrounding the Gotthard Railway as relevant in the bricolage of the Gotthard myth. Moreover, his focus remains on language as texts; other representations do not come to the fore. Hecht’s approach convinces me because she focuses on the different ‘bricoleurs’ such as engineers, workers and village people that gave meaning to nuclear power, their national identity and their professional identities. She pays attention to, for example, the way in which people in the region translated the French grandeur in site visits, spectacles and wine labels. She shows that by studying discursive practices on different – also popular – levels, we gain insight into the symbolism of nuclear power in national identity debates as well as in nationalist arguments about the meaning production around nuclear power. Changing the perspective to discourses on technological projects thus also direct us to different sources and historical actors.

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On the body of literature sketched above, I based three foundations of this work. One, most important for this research is my guiding question that arose from my initial curiosity: to what extent did Swiss national identity and the Gotthard Railway mutually construct each other? And how did the historical actors conceptualise and link these concepts? Two, I use Marchal’s term ‘bricolage’ to envision the production of meaning surrounding national identity as well as technological projects. Analysing discursive practices is a valuable way to study how historical actors articulated these interlinkages in different contexts. Three, I use the discourses surrounding technological projects as lenses through which to see the articulation of national identity as well as the meaning production around technology.

The Gotthard Railway as a lens I focus on discursive practices surrounding the Gotthard Railway that, in other studies on the Gotthard Railway, only function to decorate the texts. For me, excerpts from novels, newspapers, speeches or travel guides are crucial sources. Reading through the multitude of this material, I pinpointed periods in which the circulation of the Gotthard image in Swiss society intensified. To discern the dominant discourses about the Gotthard, I roughly studied the material available in the German National Archives (Berlin), the Swiss Wirtschaftsarchiv (Basel), the Swiss National Archives (Bern), the archives of the Swiss Federal Railway (SBB Historic, Bern) and the Swiss National Library (Bern). Especially the latter two have systematically collected material related to the Gotthard Railway.75 This process yielded several obvious peaks in attention paid to the Gotthard Railway. To amplify this material I visited the archives of the Museum for Transportation and Communication (Lucerne), the school museum (in construction) (Bern) and the library of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (Zurich). From the material, I defined four important moments and sources in which the Gotthard Railway recurred as an important theme. Through the discourses produced by historical actors in these periods, I analysed the extent to which actors tinkered with references to national identity in relation to the Gotthard Railway. The presentation of my empirical work starts with an engineering discussion in the 1870s and ends in the 1940s with several Gotthard novels. The Gotthard Railway defines this research’s starting point and the heyday of the Gotthard as a national image defines its end. I studied two other peaks in the intermitting period, namely the official opening of the railway line in 1882 and the bulk of tourist guides that were subsequently published. Using this research strategy, I risked walking into a



Introduction – The Gotthard as a national image

dead end street because it did not guarantee that I would find reference to Swiss national identity I expected. Moreover, these peaks might not have influenced the construction of a national identity directly. Yet, the peaks in attention suggested strongly that something was at stake which gave historical actors impulses to position the Gotthard Railway within ever different and new socio-cultural contexts. My curiosity to understand the co-construction of technology and identity should therefore not be confused with the ambition to rewrite the history of the Gotthard Railway or of Swiss national identity. Each of the chapters illustrates my search for the way in which people defined, redefined, constructed and deconstructed Swiss national identity and the Gotthard Railway in interaction with each other. Roughly, they consist of three parts. In the first part, I will discuss the extent to which the sources can be viewed as valuable for understanding the articulation of national identity. I intend to illustrate that the sources are never as innocent as they might appear. Moreover, I will position the different sources within their Swiss historical context. This part offers a theoretical and empirical background for the second part, in which I will analyse the sources and present the ‘tinkering’ processes of the actors. Even though the analysis of the sources prevails, I will honour the original tone of the historical actors as much as possible. Finally, in the last part of each chapter, I will look beyond the sources and the chosen time frame, to assess the influence of their tinkering in later phases. This thematic-chronological order of the chapters gives me the opportunity to discuss the following themes. In the first period, there is a high concentration of engineering material published about the Gotthard. The planning of the Gotthard Railway and especially the tunnel under the Gotthard Mountains triggered numerous proposals for where and how to build the tunnel. When, in 1872, the construction started, engineers continued to exchange their ideas about the progress of the tunnel work. One of the most remarkable discussions developed around the construction method chosen by Louis Favre, the Gotthard Tunnel entrepreneur. This engineering discussion that continued throughout the construction period forms the first source from which I will tap. The discussion took place among international engineers and in engineering journals but was also reported upon in the public press. In the second period, around the Gotthard Railway’s inaugural festivities in May 1882 the density of images increases. The opening formed the immediate cause for celebratory festivities, numerous pompous speeches and newspaper articles. The Swiss people could read the daily reports of the festivities, as well as flashbacks and commentaries in the different regional newspapers. In the official

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speeches, dignitaries presented the Gotthard Railway project to an international audience of high-ranking officials; the different regional newspapers give their own reaction to the festivities. This mix of sources offers a view on how these different actors represented the Gotthard Railway to the Swiss public. In the third period, in the decades after the opening, the Gotthard Railway transported people and freight from Northern Europe to the south and vice versa. Judged by the number of people travelling the Gotthard Railway and by the numerous travel guides that appeared in that period, the railway line did not sink into oblivion. The travel guides presented the Gotthard Railway as a way to access the Gotthard region and the Italian Lakes south of the Alps. Their writings addressed mainly the German-speaking tourist, from Germany, Austria and the German-speaking Swiss regions. The tourist guides form a rich source showing how travel guide writers presented the Gotthard as a tourist attraction. The fourth and last period is marked by an increased interest in the Gotthard Tunnel construction among, mainly German-speaking, novelists. In the interwar period the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel became a theme in popular literature. In the novels, written for a large public, the tunnel construction forms the backbone of the novels’ narratives and, at the same time, functions as a metaphor to express Swiss values and norms. Seen in the light of the war threat, the novels and their choice for the Gotthard theme offer a glance into the symbolic value ascribed to the Gotthard region and the role of the tunnel within the symbolic Gotthard landscape. The conclusion reflects on the way in which references to the Gotthard’s geographical symbolic merged with references to Swiss national identity and the Gotthard Railway. I also draw lessons that can be learned from the Gotthard case for future studies in the history of technology. Finally, the epilogue returns to contemporary images of the Gotthard in Switzerland and it comments upon the way in which contemporary actors use the Gotthard’s image in new ways.



National building practices at stake

Chapter 1 National building practices at stake

January 30, 1875, Franz Ržiha, Europe’s leading tunnel engineer, gave a speech about the Gotthard Tunnel for his fellow engineers of the Association of Austrian Architects and Engineers in Vienna.76 Austrian engineers had a reputation to maintain in tunnelling. In 1854, the era of Alpine tunnels began with the successful construction of the Semmering Tunnel. By 1875, the Mont Cenis Tunnel had just opened (1871) and engineers were drawing plans for tunnels under the Simplon77 and the English Channel.78 Moreover, the lobby for an Arlberg tunnel was in full swing which heated the debates in Austria. Tunnelling boomed. Engineers came up with ever more audacious plans for tunnels, which required alternative solutions and adjustments to the existing practices.79 Therefore, all eyes focused on progress reports of the Gotthard Tunnel. This new European tunnel project would influence the discussion about future projects. That winter day in 1875, Ržiha lectured on what he had seen at the Gotthard with his own expert eyes. Given the dynamic background, he knew well that his judgement mattered. Ržiha brought his findings clearly to the fore. He predicted that the Gotthard Tunnel would never finish on time. His lecture criticised basically every decision Louis Favre, the tunnel’s entrepreneur, had made. Ržiha sketched the Gotthard Tunnel construction as an irrational endeavour. Indignation sounded through in his words, especially because he had recently published a state-of-the-art overview on tunnelling. According to Ržiha, nothing proved that Favre had taken notice of these latest scientific developments in the field of tunnelling. If Favre would continue the construction work in his faulty manner, he risked complete failure. The only option left, according to Ržiha, would be to change radically the chosen construction method: Favre needed to abandon the ‘Belgian method’ and opt for the ‘Austrian’ one.80 The journal of Austrian Architects and Engineers in Vienna published the eminent engineer’s lecture with its harsh criticism a few months later. The publication caused a great stir among engineers involved in the Gotthard Tunnel construction and readers interested in tunnelling. Newspapers and engineering journals reprinted and discussed Ržiha’s disapproval at length. Disturbing news from the

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construction site fed these discussions. Newspapers reported lack of progress, tensions among the different parties, and the resignation of the Gotthard Railway Company’s chief engineer Robert Gerwig. Ržiha’s criticism fell on fertile soil, since it added to the increasing doubt. In the years after the publication, discussing the best national building practice developed into one of the most elaborate debates on the Gotthard Tunnel construction. The debate only settled after the completion of the tunnel in 1882, when Gustave Bridel, chief engineer of the Gotthard Railway Company, wrote a final report. The lecture put national building styles at the heart of the discussion. Pro’s and con’s of the chosen ‘Belgian’ tunnelling method filled the engineering journals throughout the construction phase. Ržiha used the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel to push forward his ideas about the future of tunnelling. The vehement tone that ignited this debate hints at opposing national engineering styles in constructing a tunnel. Representatives of different styles fought out their discord in (engineering) journals. Their articles hold a key to an analysis of how engineers defined their style and how they defended their choice of tunnelling method. Analysing the reactions that followed on his lecture offers a glance into how engineers responded to the way in which Ržiha wrapped his argumentation in references to national pride, national building method and opposing styles. His lecture offers a starting point to study the extent to which engineers linked a sense of national identity to tunnelling practices.

Engineering practices as a lens Studies in the history of technology suggest that engineers and engineering practices can offer a source for pinpointing and explaining national differences in style.81 In a comparative study, Eda Kranakis argues that the existence of national technological traditions influenced nineteenth-century design and construction of suspension bridges in the USA and France. The ways in which engineers work depend on their personal environment, but also on the social and institutional context in which they are educated and in which they operate. The socio-technical landscape offers varying educational backgrounds of engineers, professional circles to which they belong, national and local economies in which they work and availability of resources to realise their plans.82 National boundaries matter in the type of schooling, patent systems and workers organisation. Kranakis shows how these elements play a role in how engineers shape technical artefacts.



National building practices at stake

Hence, to understand the engineering discussion about the Gotthard Tunnelling method, it is important both to sketch the individual positions of the engineers and to capture the larger social structure that characterised their position. Yet, the analytical step from national style or tradition to national identity is not self-evident. Engineers themselves do not necessarily need to be aware of the distinctiveness of their work in terms of national styles. Scholars studying their practices can label them in retrospect as typical examples of a certain national tradition. The way I set out to study the construction of the relationship between Swiss national identity and the Gotthard Railway requires a closer look into expressions of national belonging in relation to their work uttered by the engineers themselves. Defining the larger socio-technical context of their work practice helps, but does not suffice to highlight how a sense of national identity entered engineering discourses. Studying French national identity in relation to nuclear power, Gabrielle Hecht illustrates that after the German armies defeated the French in the Second World War, the rhetoric of restoring the French ‘grandeur’ overlapped with the idea to develop a powerful nation with advanced nuclear power. Heavily politicised engineering practice and a ‘technopolitical regime’ meant that the French technocracy gradually gained power. By this Hecht means – in my words – a regime in which the politicised technical environment and the technocratic political environment influenced each other. Such a regime includes people, institutions, myth and ideologies, which all cooperate together. The reference to the ‘radiance of France’ became a central metaphor for both engineers and politicians in this regime, to build the French future on nuclear power. Engineers managed to manoeuvre themselves to positions where they could politically influence the national context. The distinction between the political and the technological blurs.83 To illustrate this, Hecht analysed engineering discourses. As she illustrates, engineers (or technologists in her words), as well as the institutions they worked for, established a strong relationship between technological development and the politics of the French state. By linking technology and Frenchness, they strived to define the new future of France as a technological one. Instead of de-politicising their work practices, engineers working on planning nuclear power developed ways in which to express what made their technology French. According to Hecht, engineers placed technology, for example, in a French historical tradition, to claim it as typically French. Purifying the language surrounding nuclear power from English vocabulary proved another strategy. With these rhetorical strategies they managed to legitimize their power as engineers in France. Historian of technology Mikael Hård also shows the importance of engineering discourse in linking a sense of national identity to engineering practices. He

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illustrates how German engineers at the turn of twentieth century struggled to fit the contested process of modernisation into their national culture. Striving to improve their endangered position as engineers, they employed the existing language of the learned elite about German national culture and identity. The crisis of modernity proved especially strong after the First World War, in which technology played such a devastating role. By analysing the engineering discourses in which this process of intellectual appropriation of technology takes place, he shows the nationalist bias.84 In contrast to Hecht’s French engineers who participated in the French technopolitical discourse, Hård’s study concludes that German engineers gained influence by adapting their language to the existing elitist idiom of that time. Hence, the language employed by engineers plays a crucial role in the appropriation of technology and the way in which it becomes linked to national culture. The historian Günter Dinhobl hints at the mutual construction of national building practices and national identity in his description of the Austrian Semmering Tunnel’s history.85 As he explains, tunnelling developed out of mining practices. Engineers subdivided mining practices into different methods, referring to the countries in which they were used. In tunnelling, these ‘Italian’, ‘Belgian’ and ‘Austrian’ mining methods became adapted, keeping the national categories intact. According to Dinhobl, thinking about mining and tunnelling within a framework of nations strengthened the formation of national identities. He claims that the categorisation in terms of national tunnelling practices “played a central role in the expansion of the concept ‘nation’ as well as in the establishment of national technology styles in the nineteenth century”.86 The historian Wolfgang König, who studied the construction of Swiss mountain railways, argues that in the early 20th century, confident Swiss engineers in mountain railway construction resisted technological change which they deemed a threat to their national and technological identity.87 These two historical cases illustrate that national identity and railway engineering became closely related at the turn of the century. Academic research gives ample anchor points to assume that studying engineering practices can shed light on the mutuality of the Gotthard’s tunnel construction and Swiss national identity. Studying the way in which engineers legitimized their work can show how they position themselves in the national discourse and how they help shaping it. The analytical category of national style and tradition becomes mobilised as a category by the historical actors themselves, as well as by historians in retrospect. To understand the production of the linkage between the concepts, the existing research shows the importance of sketching both the local



National building practices at stake

circumstances and the larger national sociotechnical landscape. In the first part of this chapter, I will introduce the main players and sketch the tunnelling process at the Gotthard Tunnel around the time of Ržiha’s visit. Then, I will present the way in which Ržiha positioned himself and how engineers reacted to his severe allegations. In the last section, I will describe the influence the discussion had on the appreciation of tunnelling in Switzerland. To explain these influences I will draw a larger picture of engineering tradition in Switzerland.

Drilling the Gotthard Tunnel When Franz Ržiha honoured the Gotthard’s construction sites with his visit, approximately two years of drilling had passed. In the summer of 1872, the Swiss entrepreneur Louis Favre signed a contract with the Gotthard Railway Company and took the responsibility for the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel. A month after signing this contract, Favre employed hundreds of Italian workers to start the manual construction on the northern side of the Gotthard Tunnel. While the first manual digging began, he ordered the preparation of construction sites for the mechanical drilling. The compressors still had to be ordered; the compressor houses needed to be built, just as the dynamite cabins, offices, repair workshops, carpenter workshops and blacksmith’s accommodations.88 The delivery of the Italian Mont Cenis drills, that Favre had been forced to buy, was delayed. When the drills finally came in, they proved useless for the granite and gneiss of the Gotthard Mountains.89 From April 1873 onward, the first pneumatic drills could be used. Only by the end of 1873, the whole system for organised excavation fully operated.90 Favre soon lagged behind schedule and continued to do so in 1874, when Ržiha passed by.91 The Gotthard Railway Company and Favre’s Tunnelling Company signed a contract that would – and did – ruin Favre financially if he did not live up to the contractual promises. Favre promised to build the tunnel in eight years for the price of 2,800 Swiss Francs per linear meter.92 Favre agreed to pay 5,000 Swiss Francs for each day of delay mounting to 10,000 Francs per day after more than half a year. In return the Gotthard Railway Company would pay 5,000 Swiss Francs for each day Favre finished earlier. Moreover, Favre took full responsibility for all unforeseeable events and risks during the construction. Based on these conditions, the Gotthard Railway Company favoured Favre over other parties that hoped to construct the tunnel.

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In 1872, the Gotthard Railway Company received eight reactions to the call that announced the tender in several European and in one American newspaper. It continued negotiations only with Favre and the Italian engineer Severino Grattoni, head of the Italian Società Italiana di Lavori Pubblici. At first sight, Grattoni seemed the best candidate because he constructed the Mont Cenis tunnel together with his engineer friends Germaine Sommeiller and Sebastiano Grandis. Prior to his tender he had extensively studied and probed the Gotthard Massif. Based on his experience, he offered to construct the Gotthard Tunnel in nine years for the price of 3,350 Swiss Francs per linear meter. The Italian government backed Grattoni’s tender. However, Grattoni refused to make concessions on the price and construction time, whereas Favre did. Favre needed to establish his fame as a tunnel constructor in a race against the clock.93 He was an entrepreneur from the French-speaking Western part of Switzerland, who built up his expertise through courses and work practice. Favre earned a fortune as an entrepreneur working in France and Switzerland. He gained tunnelling experience from his construction of several short tunnels.94 To buttress his bid for the Gotthard Tunnel he managed to drum up an influential network of supporters.95 His most influential ally was Daniel Colladon, professor of physics in Geneva (1802-1893), who had a strong reputation inside and outside of Switzerland. Colladon studied at the prestigious École Centrale in Paris and pursued an academic career, first in Paris, later at the University of Geneva – his home town. For the drilling of the Mont Cenis tunnel he had developed further his invention of compressed air machines.96 Colladon gave Favre’s entrepreneurial undertaking the necessary academic cachet. Once he won the tender, Favre surrounded himself with more trained engineers.97 He gave Ernest von Stockalper the responsibility for the northern tunnel. The French-speaking Stockalper graduated at the Swiss federal Polytechnikum in Zurich in 1863.98 He achieved his fame in the major Rhone correction project in the canton Valais.99 On the southern construction site, Eduardo Bossi, an engineer from Geneva, held sway over the works. For the drill workshop in Göschenen and Airolo Favre employed the French engineers Camille Ferroux and Gustave Seguin, who both built their expertise at the Mont Cenis.100 Favre thus managed to bring together a well-trained, educated and French speaking managerial staff. In his estimations, Favre relied heavily on the promise of progress in tunnel technology. He based his optimistic drilling schedule on an extrapolation of the increase in average progress at the Mont Cenis, anticipating that the efficiency of the drills would improve. Moreover, the availability of stable dynamite held a



National building practices at stake

major promise for speeding up the tunnelling process because fewer holes needed to be drilled to reach the same effect as gun powder. Efficient pneumatic drills reduced the average time to drill these holes. Renowned engineers from the Gotthard Railway Company strengthened Favre’s optimism. Prior to the drilling, they studied the geological conditions along the tunnel axis and foresaw no major problems. Different project plans functioned as the basis for the final project proposal developed by the Swiss engineer Kaspar Wetli and the German engineers Robert Gerwig and Ludwig von Beckh. Swiss engineers Karl Müller and Pasquale Lucchini, together with the German engineers Otto Gelpke and Carl Koppe, executed the triangulation.101 Favre’s trust in unlimited technological progress and favourable geological circumstances, led him to assume boldly that he could construct the tunnel in six years, two years less than the contract stated. 102

Visiting the tunnel in 1874

Pen drawing of foreign season guests admiring the tunnel construction (reprint). Courtesy Photo archive SBB Historic

Engineer Koppe described the construction sites as meeting places and as laboratories of technological progress and engineering science. Every day brought something new, the completion of a building, the improvement of a machine or a compressor, foreign guests, who exchanged experiences and looked for new ones. In short, the construction sites in

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Göschenen and Airolo developed an atmosphere that defied all descriptions: a hustle and bustle of languages, garb, habits and an exchange of opinions, experiences and new ideas. 103 As follows from this description, many engineers visited the construction site to take stock. The Gotthard construction sites brought curious engineers from all over the world together.104 Hence, the Gotthard’s successes and failures influenced the appreciation and planning of new tunnelling projects. Franz Ržiha received a warm welcome from the Gotthard Tunnel engineers of both the Gotthard Railway Company and Favre’s enterprise.105 Ržiha was born in Northern Bohemia in 1831. He attended the Polytechnisches Institut in Prague, from which he graduated at the age of twenty. In his early career, he assisted in the construction of the Semmering Railway.106 From 1878 until his death in 1897, Ržiha held a professorship of tunnelling and railway construction in Vienna.

Idealised sketch of the situation at the front of the work around 1880. Courtesy Museum of Communication, Bern



National building practices at stake

When he visited the Gotthard works in 1874, he was Chief Engineer of the national Austro-Hungarian Department of Trade.107 Published in the early 1870s, his hefty two-volume handbook on the art of tunnelling formed the only academic study that methodically explained and discussed the existing tunnel methods.108 In retrospect, historians see Ržiha as the founding father of scientific tunnelling.109 No wonder the Gotthard Tunnel engineers gave him all attention, while they guided him through the tunnel to witness the latest progress. Ržiha must have noticed the thousands of Italian workers and their families who lived in barracks and guesthouses in the small mountain village that had suddenly grown out of proportion.110 Travel reports of that time compared the construction site in Göschenen with an anthill.111 The construction sites adjacent to the village had the same frantic atmosphere: compressor house and smithies were always in full swing to support the mechanical drilling inside the tunnel. His guides led Ržiha to the workshop where Ferroux worked feverishly on the improvement of his own invention – a pneumatic drill. After the inspection of the construction site, the engineers brought Ržiha into the darkness of the tunnel to the front of the work. At the front, workers operated the rock drills that drove the first small tunnel of 2.5 by 2.5 meters. Fourteen to fifteen workers operated the six to seven drills that stood on a stillage. One man oversaw the work; three men positioned the drills in the rock; another three men controlled the taps for the drills and three regulated the transport of air. The other four to five workers helped to wet continuously the drill holes to prevent dust and overheating of the system.112 The required number of holes depended on the hardness of the rock. Once the drilling was done, another work group placed the dynamite in the holes and blasted the rock.113 The same group removed the debris and when finished, continued to lay the rails, so that the other work group could move the stillage up to the wall to start the procedure anew. Favre and his team of engineers opted for what was called the Belgian construction method that defined the logic of the working process. A small tunnel formed the top of what would become the full tunnel. After the construction of the first gallery, the excavation continued sideways by hand.114 The Belgian construction method ideally required immediate timbering of the ceiling to prevent movement of the rock. When the upper half of the tunnel was completely excavated, the roof arch could be built. Only after the bricklayers had realized the arch, could workers start the excavation of the bottom half of the tunnel. First, the downward excavation started on one side to underpin the masonry arch with struts, then on the other side. The Belgian method required no strict rules for how to build the

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Sketch of the Gotthard Tunnel’s excavation method. In: Eisenbahn. 01-10-1875

wooden support. Favre did not always follow the Belgian method to the book but adapted the system according to the changing circumstances inside and outside of the tunnel. Ržiha must have immediately noticed the deviations from the ‘rules’ of the Belgian method. The small gallery in which the workers pushed the pneumatic drill forwards progressed much faster than the rest of the work. Inside the gallery, a considerable amount of water hampered the works, especially at the southern side.



National building practices at stake

The temperature inside the tunnel rose steadily.115 Moreover, the use of ever more efficient drills and dynamite led to an enormous amount of debris that needed to be cleared from the small tunnel. Favre’s engineers did not respect the logic of Belgian tunnelling method that demanded immediate excavation and arching of the first gallery. The increasing length of the smallest part of the tunnel worsened the problems described above. The ventilation system could not reach all parts of the tunnel. The heat, water and polluted air made the work extremely heavy and at times almost intolerable. The pressure on Favre, caused by the contract, rose by the day and obliged him to prioritise. The workers suffered first. For example: fresh air came from the tube that transported the air for the pneumatic drills; often, workers used the air to power the drills rather than to clear the contaminated air in which they worked. The price was high: the number of deaths approached two-hundred and many workers left the construction work ill or handicapped. 116 Whilst engineers mentioned the harsh circumstances in the tunnel, they rarely judged it scandalous. Ržiha’s indignation about the circumstances at the Gotthard stemmed from his critical judgement of Favre’s method and did not stem from the observed social circumstances. He focussed his attention on the performance of the drills and the daily tunnelling progress.

Nationalist start of the dispute Several months after his visit, Ržiha reported his observations in a lecture at the Austrian Association for Architects and Engineers. He clearly spelled out his interests. He positioned himself as both a responsible engineer and an Austrian citizen. As an engineer, he claimed to guard the purity of science; as a citizen, he defended the Austrian cause. These two positions forced him, as he argued, to express his severe criticism of Favre’s choices in the Gotthard Tunnel construction. I feel obliged to point to the discrepancies in the construction of the Saint Gotthard Tunnel because science needs to see to it that no sins are committed against it and because, from a patriotic point of view, as an Austrian, I do not want alpine tunnelling, in general, to receive a bad name.117 Ržiha sketched the scientific progress in tunnelling that profited from the major mountain railway projects. Austrian engineers, he claimed, had contributed greatly to contemporary tunnelling techniques.118 Ržiha referred regularly to his own handbook on tunnelling, in which he meticulously analysed different tunnel methods and discussed their major advantages and flaws. He assumed that his well-informed audience had read it and was familiar with his major objections

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against the Belgian method, used to drill the Gotthard Tunnel. In Ržiha’s eyes, Louis Favre completely ignored these scientific insights, otherwise he would have recognised the superiority of the Austrian method and never would have opted for the Belgian method.119 In this lecture, Ržiha linked rhetorically national building practices of an Austrian engineering tradition to Austrian patriotism. He created a sharp distinction between the Belgian and the Austrian tunnelling methods, by connecting them to their national, or rather language-based, use. He employed terms such as ‘unfortunate’, ‘inexplicable’ and ‘irrational’ to criticise Favre’s choice for the Belgian method. He said “Only the schools of Belgian and French engineers defend and use this unfortunate system.”120 In contrast, he described the Austrian method, developed and used by Austrian engineers, as ‘theoretical’, ‘scientific’ and ‘rational’ to support his predilection. Ržiha’s ambition to make tunnelling into a science resounds in the distinction he created between the methods. Ržiha also associated patriotic feelings with his engineering judgement. The construction of the Gotthard Tunnel competed with the Austrian international transit routes, such as the Semmering and Brenner. Ržiha referred to Austria as ‘our Fatherland’ when he blamed the Gotthard Tunnel for pushing Austria to the margins economically.121 Only the construction of the Austrian Arlberg tunnel could create a necessary counterbalance. Ržiha saw it as the task of Austrian engineers to contribute to the construction of this essential and strategic project and thereby serve their country.122 Ržiha feared that problems arising during the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel jeopardized the planning of the Austrian Arlberg Tunnel because it could cast doubt on the feasibility and profitability of tunnelling in general. Ržiha’s position formed the décor to point out the flaws in Favre’s chosen tunnelling process. At the basis of Ržiha criticism lay his visit to Switzerland in 1874, which he updated with the tunnel’s progress reports published in the Swiss engineering journal Eisenbahn. He concluded plainly that, if Favre continued in the same manner, he would both miss the deadline and overrun the costs by far. Ržiha saw that the obtained efficiency of the drills paradoxically created the method’s major vulnerability: the removal of the debris could not keep up with the pace of drilling. Ržiha called Favre’s ‘laborious’ system of spoil removal ‘unnecessarily costly and time-consuming’. Because the drilling started at the top and the excavation followed later, the debris had to be moved down one floor to reach the end of the tunnel. Favre had ordered the construction of slopes to facilitate the removal, but the long slopes hampered the work in the lower part of the tunnel. Even hydraulic elevators that would soon replace the slope, could never efficiently transport the increasing amount of



National building practices at stake

waste, Ržiha predicted. The catastrophe would unfold itself once deeper inside the Gotthard, especially under the Andermatt plains where Ržiha expected increasing water flows. The Belgian method’s top heading approach worsened the situation because the water could not be rightly channelled from the top heading to the tunnel mouth. These geological problems would give the final blow to Favre’s enterprise. Ržiha saw only one escape: change to the superior Austrian tunnelling method as fast as possible.123 Should Favre adopt the Austrian system, he would need to reposition radically the first gallery from the top to the bottom of the tunnel. Central to the Austrian method was to start with the bottom heading, immediately followed by a top heading. According to Ržiha, this would enable a faster excavation of the full tunnel profile because there would be multiple starting points.124 Ržiha assumed that Favre chose the Belgian method solely to save money. The top-heading approach allowed a cheaper ventilation system in comparison to the bottom-heading system. Moreover, the Austrian method required the drilling of two heading tunnels which would, initially, be more expensive.125 The Belgian method might have proven itself cheap and successful for short tunnels; Ržiha predicted that for long tunnels the method would be disastrous. In his lecture, Ržiha drew significant distinctions between Austrian tunnelling and those of the French-speaking Swiss Louis Favre. The lecture shows Ržiha’s loyalty to both science and his country, Austria. He argued that both Austria and Austrian engineering would profit from a large engineering undertaking: the construction of the Arlberg Tunnel. His position can be understood against the background of the worsening economic crisis in Austria in this period. The Austrian government limited the procurement of large technological projects and as a result the vacancies for academically educated engineers diminished rapidly, especially in railway construction and public works. The Austrian Association for Architects and Engineers played an active role in trying to improve the situation for its engineers. Besides creating a better labour market, Austrian engineers also tried to engage themselves in national politics.126 Ržiha blurred the boundaries between scientification of tunnelling, engineering devotion to the fatherland, economic and political position of engineers and the competitiveness of Austria as an international transit.127 Juxtaposing the national styles meant that the word Austrian captured, by the end of his lecture, both his sense of national belonging and his preferred scientific engineering style. He wove Austrian economic interests with engineering interests using a strategy similar to that of the French engineers in Hecht’s study. The construction of the Arlberg Tunnel seemed a perfect project in which national prestige would mix

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with a more prominent role of a typically Austrian (scientific) type of engineering. His criticism of the Gotthard Tunnel construction offered him a rhetorical tool to position his ‘technopolitical’ mission. The Gotthard Tunnel construction defied all that Ržiha said to believe in: it harmed the economy of his country, it ignored Austrian experiences in tunnelling; and it denied scientific insights.

Restoring the public façade Ržiha clearly set the tone in spicing up his technical criticism with patriotic pride. He had not been the first engineer to criticise Favre, but he was the most influential one.128 Given Ržiha’s position in the engineering world, his comments were volatile. Because the Gotthard Tunnel symbolized a political as well as an engineering showpiece, newspapers and journals brought the latest news to a keen readership. The reactions to Ržiha from the engineering profession show a different rhetorical strategy which did not take up his nationalistic line of argumentation, but rather reduced the discussion to a debate about where to start tunnelling (top or bottom) and about differences in managerial styles. The German engineer Robert Gerwig quickly took up Ržiha’s arguments to ventilate his own negative opinion about the Gotthard Tunnel construction. Gerwig could be seen as an insider and thus his opinion carried weight. He was born in Karlsruhe and received his education at the Technische Hochschule in his hometown. He assisted in planning the Gotthard Tunnel long before Favre came into play. In 1865, he, together with Ludwig von Beckh, wrote the tunnel proposal for the Gotthard Railway Company.129 In 1872, the Gotthard Railway Company appointed him as chief engineer. However, shortly before he published his reaction to Ržiha, he had been forced to resign after continuous conflicts. He and Favre disliked each other from the very beginning.130 Gerwig had advised the Gotthard Railway Company to start the tunnel construction from the bottom, where the Company had already constructed approximately 25 meters as a probe. Favre, however, had left the bottom tunnel aside and stuck to his own method to start with the upper tunnel heading.131 Gerwig wrote an article that simply repeated his own old arguments that merged seamlessly with Ržiha’s opinion. He confirmed Ržiha’s suggestion that Favre, as a calculating entrepreneur, had opted for the fastest, simplest and therefore most economically viable construction method. Gerwig’s criticism brought no new arguments to the fore. The impact followed from where he chose to publish it: the Monitore delle strade ferrate.132 By publishing it in this popular Italian railway journal, Gerwig brought Ržiha’s criticism to an Italian public. The journal eagerly published negative commentaries on the Gotthard Tunnel. From the start



National building practices at stake

of the construction, it had been critical of the Gotthard Tunnel. Significantly, the banking house of Rothschild both sponsored the journal and had backed financially the Italian bid of Grattoni, who lost the tender to Favre. The Monitore alerted its readers to the importance of the article. It summoned politicians and engineers to take notice of the criticism as it gave insight into the vero stato, the true status, of the works.133 Soon afterwards, the Italian government expressed worries about the growing distance between the heading and the full excavation of the tunnel to the Swiss Federal Council.134 Daniel Colladon, Favre’s adviser, immediately reached for his pen to write a response. Two weeks after the publication, he sent a vehement reply. The Monitore published this letter because – as it said – it wanted to give space for a defence against Gerwig’s allegations.135 Colladon focused his attention on restoring the trust in Favre with a personal attack on Gerwig. He judged Gerwig an ordinary ‘enemy of the work’ (avversario dell’impresa) and ‘unintelligible’. Favre overcame unforeseen problems, he claimed, while Gerwig, by contrast, “spent too much time on theoretical explanations”. According to Gerwig, the work lagged behind first and foremost because of Gerwig and his successor Wilhelm Hellwag.136 By degrading Gerwig, Colladon might have hoped to make Favre’s star rise. The special correspondent in Berne of the Journal de Genève – the home town journal of Favre and Colladon – also accused Gerwig of sheer rancour against his former employer.137 Colladon’s strategy seemed to work. Favre himself did not respond publicly. He simply continued drilling the topheading with increased conviction.138 In the northern tunnel, the drilling of the top sped forward, whereas the excavation of the rest of the tunnel and the lining lagged further behind. The Gotthard Railway Company paid per linear meter tunnel, so drilling the heading yielded direct cash.139 Favre had no incentive to adjust his plan. Aside from Colladon’s public reaction, Favre’s chief engineers did not engage in the heated debate. The director of the Gotthard Railway Company, Alfred Escher, decided eventually to extinguish the fire with an expert reaction. Since Ržiha’s publication, Escher had received worrisome letters from Austria and Italy that warned him of the unrest the criticism caused. 140 The negative press jeopardized the Gotthard Railway project as a whole because investors translated successes or failures of the Gotthard Tunnel directly in terms of profit and loss. Escher felt responsible to keep the undertaking financially healthy. The railway project’s shares were susceptible to any bad news and thus Escher needed to restore trust and offer a façade of success and control. Even though the Gotthard Railway Company had

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never applauded Favre’s choice for the Belgian method, it now needed to position itself behind Favre. Escher searched for a ‘renowned tunnel engineer’ to respond to Ržiha’s criticism. He found the engineer, J. Kauffmann, from Baden-Württemberg in Germany, who worked for the Schweizerische Centralbahn and had cooperated in the construction of the Bötzberg rail tunnel.141 Alfred Escher judged him a capable challenger of Ržiha’s deadly comments because of his experience in tunnelling. Kauffmann finished his ten-page report Bau des Gotthardtunnels in May 1875, in which he disproved Ržiha’s criticisms and considered Ržiha’s tone ‘false and undeserved’.142 Engineers, shareholders and governments received his report immediately after publication. 143

Engineer voices Kaufmann did not explain why he defended Favre’s approach. He rationalised Favre’s choices by referring to experiences gained in the Mont Cenis tunnel construction. He shifted the accent from national tunnel practices to a less-charged emphasis on the discussion on the advantages or disadvantages of a bottom or top heading. Moreover, he distinguished Ržiha’s theoretical position from Favre’s practical orientation. A similar rationale can be identified in later engineering discussions, where the positions of Kaufmann and Ržiha became the two opposing poles. Kaufmann opened his defence of Favre’s choices with the statement: “Time is more important than money in the construction of alpine tunnels today”.144 He argued that any entrepreneur would choose the fastest tunnel construction method available to meet the demands. Since the progress of the first gallery defined the pace of the excavation, Kauffmann understood Favre’s choice to push this gallery forward. Rationally, the bottom-heading might seem the best option, Kauffmann agreed. He quickly added that practically it would cause major problems with ventilation, hence Favre’s choices had been correct given the circumstances. Assured by the increasing averages in progress of the top-heading, Kauffmann finally concluded that the tunnel would be finished within the contractual time limits, without exceeding the estimated costs. He saw no need to shift from a top to a bottom heading approach.145 The Gotthard Railway Company appointed him tunnel inspector that same year.146 Kaufmann’s report never really closed the dispute. The conflicts between Louis Favre and the Gotthard Railway Company continued with the new appointment of chief engineer Wilhelm Hellwag. Hellwag, born in Eutin, Schleswig-Holstein in 1827, received his engineering education in Kiel and afterwards in Munich. He worked for the Swiss Centralbahn and left the Austrian Northwest Railway



National building practices at stake

for the supervision of the Gotthard Railway construction.147 From the outset it was clear that Hellwag had a different view on management than Favre. In 1877, he trusted his opinion to paper in a report for the Gotthard Railway Company. Hellwag judged Favre incapable of constructing the tunnel.148 His report deploys a tone and style similar to Ržiha’s.149 According to Hellwag’s report, Favre lacked the scientific and intellectual abilities required to build this tunnel and therefore was unworthy to bear the responsibilities for a ‘prestigious international engineering project’. The increasing complexity of tunnelling required good judgement of technical and physical possibilities, which Favre lacked. The construction of such a tunnel should be an example of the highest technical and scientific capabilities, Hellwag argued. Favre’s personality could not guarantee the successful completion of this work.150 He claimed that he, as a man of science, would do a better job.151 The tension rose when the engineering debate was accompanied by the general financial crisis that threatened the Gotthard Railway Company. The debate about tunnelling styles continued among engineers. New progress reports from the tunnel fed this discussion.152 Even though Ržiha pretended that the scientific issue was settled in favour of the Austrian construction method, the discussion showed that engineers had not yet developed a system of best practice for constructing large alpine tunnels. Swiss, German and Austrian tunnel experts dominated the debate in lectures and journal articles. The Swiss engineering journal Eisenbahn published several reactions to the debate, for example in its February and October issues of 1875. In February, Von Muralt described the Gotthard’s tunnelling methods in detail and analysed the possibilities to change from top to bottom heading, because he deemed a bottom heading approach more favourable than the Belgian tunnelling method. In October, engineer Albert Vögeli remarked that the discussion basically polarised engineers in two camps: those favouring top heading or those preferring bottom heading. He encouraged the Gotthard Railway Company to study whether the desired progress could come from, for example, changing the tunnelling method.153 In the same year, his colleague Alfred Lorenz published a small booklet entitled ‘Top or bottom heading?”.154 He argued that no universal laws existed to define which tunnelling method would be best, yet constructing a top-heading seemed most rational to him. Engineer Könyves-Tóth also gave an overview of the debate. He concluded that Favre had rightly chosen the Belgian method, because engineers had not demonstrated the bottom heading approach better for long tunnels in hard rock. He based his judgements, as he argued, ‘on facts and not to theories’.155

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Proponents and opponents of the top heading system could be found everywhere and did not distinguish themselves by their national background. The engineering issue became disengaged from national preferences and practices, as engineers expressed their opinions based on their own experience or readings. The discussion about national tunnelling methods became de-nationalised and illustrates the attempts of engineers to use scientific claims to professionalise tunnelling.156 In the nineteenth century, engineers planned and organised tunnelling carefully, based on models of mechanisation and industrialisation.157 The pressure to build ever faster forced entrepreneurs and engineers to change existing practices. During the second half of the nineteenth century, engineering academies taught engineers, with military discipline, how to deal with the pressure and complexity of engineering projects. “There was little procedural thinking in the projects that empirically trained men built, while the process was the main theme in those that professionally educated engineers organised.”158 This observation of historian Tom Peters helps to explain the clash between the academically educated German and Austrian chief engineers who advocated scientific tunnelling and the pragmatic entrepreneur Louis Favre who wanted to build fast and cheaply. The debate also shows that engineers did not agree if and how they could define best practices. In July 1879, Louis Favre passed away of a heart attack during a tunnel inspection.159 A few months later, the two tunnel headings met on February 28, 1880. Modest festivities marked the moment of the breakthrough. Tunnel inspector Kauffmann held a speech in which he commemorated Favre. He reminded the audience of the disputes that had haunted Favre during the whole construction period. Kauffmann declared that the breakthrough of the tunnel had proven all the ‘faultfinders’ wrong and Favre’s practical mind right.160 Nonetheless, in many respects his adversaries had been right in predicting that Favre would encounter major problems and would not finish the tunnel in time. At the breakthrough, the engineers estimated that the workers would need another 14 months for the full excavation and masonry of the tunnel. Eventually, the workers and engineers of Favre’s company finished the major part only at the end of 1881; in May 1882, the official opening took place. The financial loss and the delays did not harm Favre’s posthumous reputation. In the summer of 1882, a few months after the official opening of the Gotthard Railway, the Swiss chief engineer of the Gotthard Railway Company Gustave Bridel, successor of Hellwag who, like Gerwig, had been forced to resign, wrote a final report.161 The report questioned whether Favre’s managerial style had been faulty or if the chosen construction method caused the delay in finishing the tunnel.162 In 1880, the construction of the Arlberg tunnel – so feverishly advocated by



National building practices at stake

Ržiha – commenced. Bridel used its progress reports to compare tunnel methods. At the Arlberg, the speed of tunnelling the first gallery (from the bottom following the Austrian method) kept pace with the excavation and masonry (English method). The speed exceeded that of the Gotthard Tunnel by 50%. Therefore, Bridel concluded that the top-heading construction and the Belgian method proved less effective.163 By focussing on the choice for tunnelling method, Bridel cleared Favre from accusations of ‘irrational’ or ‘disastrous’ management. Favre was not to blame, the chosen tunnel method was. Only in retrospect could one say that the choice for Belgian tunnelling system was suboptimal. Bridel’s report and the successful construction of the Arlberg Tunnel ended the engineering discussion about the best tunnelling method. The Belgian method would never be used again for the construction of large alpine tunnels.164 Clearly and significantly, engineers involved in the debate about tunnelling methods did not express a link between the Gotthard Tunnel and Swiss national identity. They did not mobilise a sense of national identity to defend the choice for a certain tunnelling method, despite the vehemence with which Ržiha had started the debate and despite the importance of the tunnel for Switzerland. Engineers detached tunnelling from its roots in mining into an independent specialty. They still named tunnelling practices after their national origins, but associations with national practices and traditions weakened. The Belgian method, developed in the coal mines of Belgian, influenced mainly French speaking engineers. However, during the debate, the real discussion point seemed to be whether to start with the top or bottom heading. Moreover, engineers combined different national styles within one tunnel project and did not necessarily prefer the construction method of their country. The nationalised tunnel practices seemed easily put to the background of the discussion. In contrast to the expectations expressed in the beginning of this chapter, the analysis shows that through the debate, the Gotthard construction gained Swiss fame detached from science and engineering prowess. The controversy about tunnelling methods illustrates the contrast between proponents of a scientific approach in tunnelling and those engineers who celebrated practical work experience. Engineers lacked experience in constructing long Alpine tunnels; the Mont Cenis Tunnel was the sole comparable example. The proponents of Favre focused the polemic on the contrast between rigid theory and pliable practice; between coward routine and risk taking; between the German Gotthard Railway Company engineers and the French-speaking Swiss Louis Favre and his engineers. The arguments are deprived of any explicit reference to national pride, prowess or identity. Ržiha’s stern patriotic motives remain unreciprocated. The discussion played out as a clash between the entrepreneur Favre, who wanted

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to construct the tunnel as rapidly, pragmatically and cheaply as possible, and those tunnel engineers who wanted to base tunnelling on scientific methods.

Swiss tunnelling in retrospect Charles Andreae, one of Switzerland’s influential twentieth-century tunnel engineers and professor of railway and tunnel construction at the Polytechnikum in Zurich, wrote one of the few existing histories on Swiss tunnelling.165 He judges Favre’s enterprise a failure in scientific terms because the applied Belgian tunnel method did not add to progress in tunnelling.166 Nevertheless, it gave a great impetus to Swiss engineering in general because the construction sites formed large scale laboratories where Swiss engineers could discuss and gain experience. Moreover, Andreae argues that Swiss engineers developed their own style after the experiences of the Gotthard Tunnel construction. They created their style by working rather loosely with the existing national styles of tunnelling throughout the nineteenth century.167 The expansion of the Swiss railway network necessitated the construction of several tunnels and Switzerland thereby offered ample laboratories to test new tunnelling styles. The way in which Andreae positions the Gotthard Tunnel into a Swiss tunnelling tradition denies that before the construction of the Gotthard Railway, Swiss engineers rarely played a central role. Nevertheless, Andreae concludes that “[t]he role of Switzerland in the development of tunnelling has been significant. Switzerland’s mountainous geography and its centrality in Europe predestined Switzerland to this role.”168 Andreae argues that if a certain Swiss style developed in tunnelling it did not achieve fame through a scientific tradition, but rather through pragmatic tinkering with existing methods. The emphasis on the development of a pragmatic Swiss tunnelling style also comes back in the admiration for Louis Favre. From the moment of his death on July 19, 1879, Favre’s biographers turned him into a legend and an example of a good Swiss citizen.169 In popular histories Favre developed into the hero of the Gotthard Tunnel construction, an example for Swiss youth. 170 In 1906, the editor’s preface of Schweizer eigener Kraft explains how important every-day experiences are for the development of talent; education alone is not enough.171 To prove this point, he asked several well-known persons to describe twelve ‘self made’ Swiss entrepreneurs. Eugène Richard, member of the Swiss Council of States in Switzerland for Geneva and the liberal party, wrote Favre’s chapter. He wrote: “The triumph of Favre is also the triumph of his



National building practices at stake

Fatherland, Switzerland.”172 The presented baseline of his life commanded admiration for Favre as a self-made man who committed himself to a great deed of national and international importance. Favre was admired because he stayed true to his simple origins; he worked his way up without a university degree and stood as a labourer among the labourers. His talents and perseverance allowed him to climb the ranks rapidly to become a successful entrepreneur. His love for the Gotthard Tunnel and the workers was frustrated by the battles he fought against the bureaucratic Gotthard Railway Company and the scepticism of the learned engineers. In this manner, his biographers made Louis Favre into a Swiss hero.173 Extolling Favre and his managerial style as ‘typically Swiss’ took place by picturing the endeavour as entrepreneurial tinkering in a race against the clock. This depiction ignores the contribution of (Swiss) engineers who advised Favre and focuses instead on Favre’s own experiences as an engineer-entrepreneur. In an effort to link the Gotthard Tunnel construction to Switzerland, biographers of Favre move engineering practices to the background. Paradoxically, this backgrounding of science and technology had been a tool to discredit Favre, whose opponents sketched an image of the tunnel construction as chaotic, irrational, expensive and inefficient. His proponents used this image to praise Favre as the embodiment of the non-scientist in a positive sense: his work attitude contrasted with the book knowledge of engineers; his practical problem solving opposed the theoretical approach of the scientists; and Favre’s experience proved victorious over the university studies of his opponents.174 The rhetorical tools used to defend Favre’s choices against Ržiha’s criticism, uncoupled the discussion from national practices and coupled the construction to the individual entrepreneur Favre. By this move they also disconnected the chosen tunnelling method from science.

Swiss engineering practices Despite a growing body of literature on national building practices, it is difficult to grasp the relation between national identity and engineering practice.175 To explain why (Swiss) engineers did not respond in the same patriotic tone as Ržiha, I will shortly sketch the sociotechnical landscape in which the debate took place. Two aspects explain that nineteenth-century Switzerland engineers did not operate within a ‘technopolitical regime’, as was the case in post-war France. First, the construction of the Gotthard Railway and Tunnel stimulated – rather than reflected – interest in engineering in Switzerland.176 The Swiss national government founded the federal polytechnic, in Zurich in 1855.177 Soon, it became a prestigious institute with international appeal.178 The number of foreign students (mainly

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from Austria-Hungary and Germany) exceeded the number of Swiss students. Also, many (German-speaking) foreigners occupied professorships. The development of the Swiss polytechnic as a symbol of Swiss national pride contrasted with the internationality of the students and professors. Only after the 1890s, did Swiss engineering students become a small majority. Moreover, graduated engineers rarely entered a political career. In contrast to the French Ecole Polytechnique, the founders of the Swiss polytechnic focused on the added value of engineers for industry. In this period it is impossible to speak about a clear linkage between politics and engineering. Second, tunnelling was not a well-developed scientific discipline, but rather comprised one area of civil engineering. Engineers quarrelled whether or not tunnelling could become a science or should stay an engineering practice.179 For example, Favre’s chief engineer Stockalper gained experience at the Rhone River correction, a major Swiss project in the canton Valais. Moreover, Switzerland lacked an engineering tradition in tunnelling. Colladon, the most experienced engineer in Favre’s team, had mainly worked and studied outside Switzerland.180 In the second half of the nineteenth century, engineers from England, Germany, Italy and Russia constructed the railways.181 Foreign companies, with foreign engineers, built the first major tunnels, such as the English company Thomas Brassey from London, which built the Hauenstein Tunnel (1853-1858).182 That a Swiss engineerentrepreneur with little experience won the Gotthard Tunnel tender was therefore rather remarkable.183 In the years following the Gotthard Tunnel construction, Swiss engineers gained more prominent roles in tunnelling, such as Ferdinand Rothpletz at the Lötschbergtunnel (1908-1913).184 Andreae, who worked at the Lötschberg Tunnel and Simplon Tunnel construction, obtained a professorship at the polytechnic in Zurich, only in the early 1920s. Yet, tunnelling did not develop itself as a typically Swiss discipline within the polytechnic, as it would for example in Prague, where Ržiha obtained a professorship in tunnelling in the late 1870s already. The conclusion of this chapter proves simultaneously disappointing and promising. Ržiha’s criticism, in a lecture full of references to the nation, fed my assumption that the engineering debate about tunnelling practices would give insight to the mutual construction of these practices and national identity. Following the debate against the background of the tunnelling processes, however, yielded personalised public reactions and a de-nationalised engineering discussion. None of the engineers mobilised national identity or national traditions to define the choices



National building practices at stake

made or to position themselves. Remarkably, the debate points out that the demarcation line consisted of marking a boundary between scientific tunnelling and pragmatic tunnelling. While the construction of the Arlberg Tunnel settled the engineering discourse in favour of the bottom heading approach promoted by Ržiha, Favre became the moral winner. Being characterised as a pragmatic entrepreneur in contrast to well-educated engineers in the tunnelling debate instigated Favre’s biographers to de-link explicitly national identity, the tunnel construction and science. In that respect, my analysis of the debate offered an unexpected twist.

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Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

Chapter 2 Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

After 7.5 years of construction work the Gotthard Tunnel neared its breakthrough. Swiss newspaper articles tried to capture the shivers of anticipation. The northernSwiss liberal Schaffhauser Intelligenzblatt published a little poem on February 24, 1880. The poem expresses a feeling of expectancy. A week to go! – And a day of joy, A day of jubilation dawns in dark times Triumph; yes let’s announce it today, Be ready for a cheerful celebration!185 Only four days later – not a week – the probe broke through the dividing tunnel wall. The next day, Sunday February 29, 1880, the Gotthard Railway Company orchestrated the ‘official’ breakthrough in the presence of journalists, high-ranking engineers and officials.186 The Gotthard Railway Company organised festivities mainly for the people directly involved in the construction work. The party gathered in the narrow tunnel to witness the workers drilling through the thin wall that still divided the southern and the northern headings.187 Around eleven o’clock, the two tunnel engineers in charge of the north and south side, Ernst Stockalper and Eduardo Bossi, embraced each other through the breach. The invited crowd followed their example and stepped over the threshold to celebrate the event. Tunnel inspector Kauffmann held a speech in the cramped and warm tunnel heading. In Göschenen, the telegraph service worked overtime to announce officially the news to the world. The Gotthard Railway Company distributed commemoration medals to the workers and it treated the officials and chief engineers the Gotthard Railway Company to a banquet in the machine hall of Airolo.188 More than two years later, the formal inauguration of the complete Gotthard Railway took place. The inaugural festivities had an official and international character that exuded an atmosphere of well-staged lustre. A week before the railways would open for passengers, high officials from the three involved states, Switzerland, Germany and Italy, gathered to Lucerne to attend the festivities. The

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settings chosen for the festivities mirror the importance the organisers attached to the opening of the international railway line. Dozens of journalists received invitations. For days, the Swiss newspapers filled their front pages with reports and commentaries. Dignitaries held numerous speeches, knowing that the organisation had notified the press well in advance. The high-ranking guests seized the opportunity to explain the importance of the newest international railway line through the Alps. Journalists of the different newspapers interpreted the events and the speeches in their own terms, which, at times, deviated from the officially produced idiom. The newspapers also found different formats to bring the news. The Luzerner Tagblatt printed a triumphant poem on the eve of the grand inauguration of the Gotthard Railway. It was entitled ‘To you, Saint Gotthard’. Melchior Schürmann described the Gotthard Railway as ‘a work of giants’ and a ‘work of peace’ that united the nations. A work of giants, it nears its ending A work of peace, it is complete Toward north the southern coast is smiling, Italy’s eternal magic beauty Saint Gotthard cleared the way Through its ancient mountain terrain What human spirits can barely imagine Is today’s ornament of united nations.189 In reaction to the exultant tone, a reporter form the Basler Nachrichten, the speaking-tube of the liberal democrats, wrote that nineteenth-century people had become blasé.190 Science and technology seemed to offer continuously new developments that hardly surprised people anymore.191 Europe had seen multiple projects of comparable grandeur, such as the construction of the Suez Canal (1869) or the Mont Cenis Tunnel (1871). This account of the journalist from Basel caught a feeling of ambivalence that sounds through in the discourses surrounding the Gotthard Railway’s inauguration. The rhetoric of progress still held, but the context changed.192



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

Looking through the lens of events Large events evoked large words. Happenings, such as the Gotthard Railway’s festivities, brought high-ranking people, journalists and local people together to celebrate the completion. Newspapers communicated these moments to anyone interested. The Gotthard Railway’s opening drew international attention. Eyecatching engineering objects were not only large technological projects, but also highly politicized. The historian Manfred Hettling argues that the Swiss in the late nineteenth century actively searched for events (Erlebnisse) to express a sense of national identity. National exhibitions, travels or Festspiele functioned as moments in which the Swiss population experienced a link to their country. These events transmitted both knowledge about the nation and, more importantly, offered a possibility to connect emotionally to the abstract political body of the nation state.193 By the end of the nineteenth century, an intensified phase of popularisation of the Swiss nation followed national political consolidation. Mirroring developments in several other countries where nationalist icons arose, historical battles were re-lived; the state fixed an official national holiday; and plans for a national museum emerged.194 This phase of national identity consolidation included an increase in national festivities, plays and monuments.195 Scholars on national identity formation focus on this materialisation of an abstract national sense of belonging. They show how people are reminded of a national identity in the every day life. Reminders can be found in reference to typical landscapes or food patterns that evoke a sense of national belonging even though they do not always need to refer explicitly to the nation.196 The internalisation of a feeling of belonging can also be developed as a collective memory, built up through experiencing and remembering events.197 The openings of railways, or other technological projects, offered such an opportunity to make a lasting impression. They offered moments in which individuals in a society could relate to something abstract of which they were part.198 Technology studies describe similar processes of how people give meaning to technologies in society. They show the importance of cultural appropriation or domestication of (railway) technologies within society. (Historical) actors mix ‘social, ‘cultural’ and ‘technological’ elements to position the new technology within a specific context.199 The language created around technologies, either negative of positive, situates new technologies in a “more familiar world of tradition and linguistic convention.” Aant Elzinga points out that “technologies are not only taken

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up qua hardware but also as perceptions in the minds of those who are involved or whose livelihoods are affected by the transformations they generate.” These discourses, as Elzinga claims, trigger a ‘cultural nerve’, which could, for example, be references to national identity.200 As the anthropologist Eve Darian-Smith illustrates in her book on the Channel Tunnel, discussions about this technological project revived images of regional identity in Kent that influenced both the construction of nationalised landscape and the tunnel construction.201 Appropriation processes render technologies into metaphors of social change.202 The historian Rosalind Williams argues that in the nineteenth century the underground became public space, through the construction of, for example, tunnels. References to the underground in literature and paintings turned these spaces into metaphors of modernity and social change. Excavation projects threatened to undermine the existing society; they symbolized the abstract progress of civilisation. She argues that, for the middle class that was confronted with all these changes, the underground infrastructures meant “fear and anxiety, as it became clear that society as well as nature was being undermined”.203 This lays bare the ambivalence of the middle class toward the increasingly technological environment. This scholarly literature demonstrates that the study of events, such as the inauguration of the Gotthard Railway and its tunnel, allows one to develop a perspective on how people react to the arrival of technology in a specific society, as well as to shed light on how people use the image of technology to highlight societal processes. The metaphors used throughout the festivities by the officials help reconstructing how these officials interlinked images of (European) society and the Gotthard Railway. The reactions to the festivities in the newspapers illustrate how newspapers translated these images to their readership. The journalists did not simply copy the ‘official’ language, but adopt it in other discourses. Newspapers formed the main mass medium of the late nineteenth century. In the second half of the nineteenth century their importance grew because a larger part of the Swiss population could read. Moreover, the newspapers were transformed from political speaking tubes into transmitters of information. Although press and politics remained closely tied in Switzerland, the political influence on newspaper content diminished. New formats accompanied this change and made newspapers more appealing to their readership.204 Newspapers helped to define readers’ horizons and carried the norms and values of Swiss society; hence, they also bore and influenced people’s identity.205 Many regions had their own newspaper. Large liberal newspapers, such as the Neue Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ) and the



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

Journal de Genève, reached out to a large readership, also beyond the region in which they were issued.206 NZZ functioned as the voice of the Gotthard Railway Company.207 The liberal newspapers differed from the catholic conservative newspapers that referred often to religion. Catholic-conservative presses included the Lucerne newspaper ‘Das Vaterland’ and the French-Swiss ‘Liberté’.208 Das Vaterland addressed the German-speaking Swiss population.209 Newspapers from the French speaking part of Switzerland promoted the nation-state vehemently. Historian Manfred Eisner, who studied the new-year articles in both NZZ and Das Vaterland, shows that NZZ referred twice as often to a nationalistic “our Switzerland” than Das Vaterland in the period between 1879 and 1883. In this period, Italian newspapers provided the Italian speaking canton Ticino with news and information. The different newspapers brought the news about the Gotthard Railway inauguration in different ways, linking the official speeches to regional sentiments. Late nineteenth-century Europe offers a dynamic background for the investigation of the cultural appropriation of the Gotthard Railway as well as the celebration of the materialisation of the nation. The historians R. Palmer and Joel Colton describe the period from 1871 to the First World War as marked by “unparalleled material and economic growth, international peace, domestic stability (…) and continued faith in science, reason and progress”.210 As they claim, Western society believed in the powers of natural science and technology. This also inspired the desire to spread civilisation to ‘less developed’ parts of the world.211 Moreover, this belief could spread widely to more Europeans than ever because of new popular media.212 As the power of nation states grew, political tensions within Europe increased. With the unification of Italy (1861) and Germany (1871), two new potentially powerful and large nations were created. Soon after, their economic, political and military power rose. In particular, the increased power of Germany instilled fear and forged new alliances amongst states. Only a few days before the Gotthard opening festivities, Italy had signed a political treaty with Germany and Austria-Hungary (Triple Alliance). The need for peace kept the powers in balance. After the war with France in 1871, Chancellor of the German Empire Otto von Bismarck realised that another European war would tear Germany to pieces. His strategy was to isolate France and to strive for peace European-wide. While a Europe of nation states developed, a large part of trade remained international, based on the liberal ideologies prevalent at the time.213 However, the economic crisis that hit Europe in 1873 challenged the economic relationships between countries because protectionist laws were passed.

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The Swiss economy grew steadily after the foundation of the confederation in 1848, despite some dips. Switzerland shared in the economic crises between the 1870s and 1890s. Because Switzerland developed into an export economy, it became sensitive to fluctuations of the European market.214 Swiss historians argue that primarily the export industries suffered. By 1876, railway development stagnated and railway companies went bankrupt.215 It was amid this ambiguous atmosphere of internationalism, nationalism, liberalism and protectionism that the Gotthard inaugural festivities took place.

Celebrating the Gotthard Railway May 1882, the city of Lucerne welcomed guests for the inauguration of the Gotthard Railway. Despite budget cuts that deprived Lucerne of its access line and chief railway station, the Swiss Government chose it as a starting point of the festivities. Officials from Germany, Italy and Switzerland gradually flocked in. The impressive list included high ranking officials. Bismarck, declined the invitation, due to serious illness, but his deputy, Minister Karl Heinrich Von Bötticher represented him. The president of the German Reichstag, Albert Erdmann Karl Gerhard von Levetzow, also travelled to Switzerland together with the German envoy. The Italian governmental delegation consisted of, among others, vice-president of the Italian parliament, Giovanni Battista Varè, and the Minister of Public Works Alfredo Baccarini. The Swiss government hosted the festivities and several of its representatives attended. In addition to government representatives, other invitees were railway directors, bankers and representatives of the larger cities that had financially supported the Gotthard Railway construction. Of course, the board of the Gotthard Railway Company and the main figures of the Favre Tunnelling Company made their entree. Conspicuous by his absence was Alfred Escher, the resigned Gotthard Railway Company’s director.216 The organisers offered the guests a three-day celebration, consisting of: a welcome in Lucerne; a train ride on the new Gotthard Railway; and a festive welcome in the northern-Italian city Milan upon arrival. The festively decorated city of Lucerne treated the guests on its tourist attractions: a steamboat tour on the Lake of Lucerne and a ride up the Mountain Rigi with the cog wheel train, the city’s latest attraction. The night before the inaugural trains would leave for Milan, the city prepared a luxurious dinner in the esteemed hotel Schweizerhof, where about seven hundred guests gathered for the banquet. The illuminations and fireworks after dinner



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

Inaugural festivities North of the Alps. Pen drawing of J. Weber from Ueber Land und Meer. Courtesy Museum for Communication, Bern

were crowned by fireworks symbolising the Gotthard Tunnel portal.217 The next day the special train took the guests from Lucerne to Milan. It rode the invitees under the Alps and across the border of Italy, even though the Gotthard Railway officially only ran to the Italian border village Chiasso. Along the route, villages organised modest welcomes for the dignitaries’ trains; the Gotthard Railway Company offered the guests a small meal at the station buffet in Göschenen; and Milan welcomed the international guest to celebrations. The day after the arrival of the trains, Milan prepared a luxurious dinner at the Gardini Pubblici in the presence of Prince Amedeo, who represented his brother King Umberto of Italy. The festivities ended with a celebratory performance in La Scala, the prestigious concert hall in Milan. In honour of the three countries, the orchestra played overtures of three opera’s and presented the hymn ‘il Gottardo’, specially written by the famous Italian composer of that time Amilcare Ponchielli.218 The festivities gave ample opportunity for the dignitaries to spin out the importance of the railway, in the presence of several hundred international guests and the international press. Their speeches reinforced the dominant imagery, namely that Gotthard Railway formed the latest major international railway line that would make a difference in Europe. Many newspapers published speeches verbatim the next day, so the Swiss and international public could take full account. Some of the

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Inaugural festivities south of the Alps. Pen drawing of J. Weber from Ueber Land und Meer. Courtesy Museum for Communication, Bern

speeches of the Swiss dignitaries were published separately. The speeches ranked the Gotthard Tunnel among the long list of major technological projects of the nineteenth century. Four themes recurred in the representation of the Gotthard Railway. The speeches presented the railways and especially its tunnel as: a breach in the alpine wall; a result of collective cooperation; a work of peace; and the pride of three individual nation states. I will analyse the speeches in the first part and the reactions in the newspapers in the second part of the chapter.

Annihilating the Alps In nineteenth century rhetoric, railway tunnels served as examples of progress and ‘heroic materialism’. Their construction was “like a great military campaign: the will, the courage, the ruthlessness, the unexpected defeats, the unforeseen victories”.219 The construction of the tunnel underneath the Gotthard Mountains received most attention. The speakers took great care to present the tunnel as part of a long series of well-known engineering projects. The president of the Swiss Federal Council, Simeon Bavier, opened the after-table speeches at the banquet in Lucerne. As the highest representative of the Swiss state, Bavier welcomed the international party on Swiss territory.220 His speech can be seen exemplary for



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

the many other speeches that would follow. The most popular metaphor in the speeches presented the tunnel as a breach in the Alpine wall. In Bavier’s speech, the Alps functioned as a physical as well as a figurative barrier between nations. The Gotthard Railway formed a ‘wide hole’ that pierced through ‘the old wall’. By destroying this wall, the Gotthard Tunnel construction heralded a new era, one through which a ‘breeze of springtime’ could pass. This breeze signalled the springtime of the nations (Völkerfrühling).221 The speeches that followed made similar remarks about the physical and symbolic role of both the Alps and the tunnel. Joseph Zingg, director of the Gotthard Railway Company, also described the Alps as an enormous barrier (gewaltige Schranke) and the tunnel as a breach.222 His speech focused on the importance of the Gotthard Railway for international trade and emphasised the exchange of the spiritual traffic (geistige Verkehr). The German representative and president of the Reichstag, Von Levetzow, connected the tunnelling of the ‘dividing wall’ with a cultural rapprochement of German and Italian ‘tongues’. His speech claimed that the tunnel linked two cultural spheres that had been separated by the Alps.223 The image of the Alps as a separator of cultures also recurred in a more playful way: On the fountain in front of the famous Milanese ‘Duomo’ stood ‘Taken away by human spiritual strength the mountain wall which separated Italy and Switzerland’.224 Presenting the Alps as metaphoric divider of nations and cultures helped to represent the inaugurated tunnel as symbolic unifier. The symbolism of the tunnel increased further with the representation of it as a project that was both the outcome and the carrier of peace. The historian Tom Peters explains these military metaphors by stating that many technological developments emerged from military ordnance, in his book Building the nineteenth century on the construction of large technological projects in the nineteenth century. This military construction logic thus offered a valuable metaphor to voice the construction of technological projects.225 The speeches illustrate the multiple ways in which the war metaphor appears. Representing the Alps as an obstacle alluded to the image of nature as the enemy, in which the construction of the Gotthard Railway represented a battle against the forces of nature. Baccarini literally addressed the guests at the banquet as if they celebrated a successful battle. He said: “Gentlemen, I spoke of victory, so let me address you as victors assembled here from different parts of the three nations to laureate this grand victory together.”226 First, the speakers contrasted the intentions of the past with today’s intentions; second, the metaphor of war helped to express the intensity of the construction process; and finally, it allowed the speakers to make a rhetorical twist that transformed the metaphor of war into a metaphor of peace. In

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the speeches, these different uses often merged. The speakers made it clear that the construction of the railways had nothing to do with war aggression. The war idiom contrasted the past with the new future. For example, Zingg spoke about the belligerent past that ended with the construction of the tunnel. For thousands of years, the inhabitants of the North have been drawn toward the sunny south. Of course they did not always come as friends to this beautiful country. Now again, we feel the pull to cross the Alps. However, we do not come with weapons in our hands. We would like to conquer something, but not, my dear guests from Italy, your land or cities, but rather your hearts.227 The speech of Bavier employed a similar twist when he stated: “For thousands of years, well-armed columns carried their banners over the mountains (…). Now, they bring victory instead of destruction and peace instead of war.”228 The war image also made it possible to give meaning to the sacrifices of so many people and, although not said out aloud, so much money. Noticeably, this rhetoric fully denied the true hardship of the labour and the miserable reality of the work environment.229 However, the military metaphor helped to put the suffering and deaths of so many Italian workers into a heroic perspective. Bavier stated: “Like warriors, who die during open battle, these pioneers for the conquest of peace died on the field of honour, while performing their duty.”230 The analogy with war recurred in many different forms, especially during the breakthrough festivities. Under the portrait of Louis Favre that hung in the machine hall during the banquet, the guests could read: “Hail Favre, marvellous son of Switzerland, fallen on the battle field of labour and honour.”231 Rambert, the legal advisor of the Louis Favre’s Tunnelling Company, gave a speech during the breakthrough festivities in which he referred to Favre as a general and the workers as an army: “The moment the last dividing wall fell, the workers stood there as a troop that stormed a fortress and suddenly felt without the general.”232 The distribution of silver and bronze medals during the breakthrough festivities fit this image completely. The Gotthard Railway Company’s tunnel inspector Kauffmann spoke: “The workers have the right, to carry their medals like brave soldiers.”233 The use of the ‘material heroism’ came full circle. Referring to the workers as an army and to Louis Favre as its general metaphorically created war heroes who fell during their fight, from the victims of the tunnel construction. The battle, however, conveyed a different meaning than before: it was a battle with new arms and new purposes. It stood for the higher cause of progress, prosperity and peaceful communication.



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

Medals for the workers at the Gotthard Tunnel. Courtesy Museum for Communication Bern

The breakthrough and the three-day-long inaugural festivities also highlighted that the tunnel was the outcome of international cooperation. The Gotthard Railway Company ordered the breakthrough medals to be engraved with the words “to the workers of the Gotthard Tunnel, March 1880 Germania. Helvetia. Italia. Viribus Unitis”.234 The city Lucerne decorated its streets with the coat of arms of the three nations; the same images adorned the festive trains that drove the dignitaries to Milan. The speakers spoke in German, Italian or French depending on their preference, which stressed the internationality of the event. Direct reference to the united forces recurred in the speeches. To quote Bavier again: “The genesis of this giant work, for which the force of a single nation did not suffice, has been made possible by the unification of forces of three nations’.235 In a more ambiguous metaphor Von Levetzow compared the construction of the Gotthard Railway with the construction of the Tower of Babel. He argued that instead of the hubris that accompanied the construction of the tower, the Gotthard Railway represented a work of peace, meant to stimulate peace among peoples and civilisation.236 Alfredo Baccarini optimistically rejoiced during the banquet in Lucerne: “after the Mont Cenis, the Gotthard is drilled and the Panama Canal will soon be pierced.”237 Zingg presented the Gotthard Tunnel as a continuation of the Suez Canal because the new tunnel finalised the link between the ‘Rhinecountries’ directly to the Orient.238 The speakers presented the construction of the Gotthard Railway as both the materialisation of their political relations and the continuation of other large-scale historical projects.

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The general praise of European civilisation, so abundantly present in the speeches, left marginal room for the expression of national pride. Whereas, the Gotthard Tunnel construction had given rise to vehement debates, the speakers silenced the economic, political and strategical interests of the individual states, regions and cities. The ‘breach in the Alpine wall’ served equally regions south and north of the Alps. Furthermore, the peaceful war metaphor underexposed the new railways as an economic and geo-political move. Moreover, the stress on the united forces detracted attention from the increasingly tense relation between nation states in Europe. Still, the few remarks on national pride illustrate to what level the speakers felt they could express the importance of the Gotthard Railway in relationship to their country’s future. When Simeon Bavier welcomed the international guests on Swiss territory, he also gave a short history of the Gotthard Railway. He praised the way in which the Swiss cantons had brought together the extra subsidy for the completion of the Gotthard Railway in 1878 and how the Swiss population had supported that decision in a popular referendum.239 In his speech Bavier said: “[S]witzerland proved her unity. Not only those cantons with direct interest in the Gotthard Railway, but also those cantons that favoured other mountain railways and which saw the Gotthard Railway harming their interest, voted in a festive referendum to support the work that had started.”240 Swiss citizens living and working in Milan invited the Swiss delegates on a breakfast. The representatives of Geneva gave a speech, in which Arthur Chenevière referred to the Swiss philanthropic mission [for example the Red Cross] and Antoine Alfred Désiré Carteret celebrated the Swiss values of liberty, democracy and progress, “which the other countries do not yet enjoy”. He also referred to the importance of international institutions for the image of Switzerland in Europe.241 Foreign speakers attributed similar characteristics to Switzerland. The syndic of Milan, Giulio Bellinzaghi praised Swiss cities as examples of labour and continuous progress.242 Bötticher spoke highly of Switzerland’s foundation of international institutions, such as the Universal Postal Union (Weltpostverein) and the Convention of Geneva, as service to the international community.243 References to Italy focused on the Italian unification process.244 Baccarini referred to the symbolic importance of the Gotthard Railway as a ‘path of restoration’. He referred to Carlo Cattaneo, who was an early backer of the Italian unification and who had sought refuge in the Swiss canton Ticino.245 The speech of Varè dubbed the Gotthard Railway one of the best decisions the Italian parliament had ever made because it supported both the domestic and foreign affairs of Italy.246



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

With regard to Germany, Von Levetzow positioned the Gotthard Railway in Germany’s broader ‘program of peace’. The construction of the Gotthard Railway fit the higher goals of this program seamlessly. “Instead of warfare, he [German Emperor JS] wanted to use his power to increase freedom, national welfare and civilization.”247 References to the individual nation states captured positive sentiments of cooperation, linkage and peace. The speakers refer to the nation states as political units that made the construction of the Gotthard Railway possible. Their speeches reflected a view of the Gotthard Railway as the materialisation of international relationships.

Civilisation and technology The speeches predictably reproduced the late nineteenth-century pride in European ‘civilisation’. The advancement of technology buttressed Europeans’ feeling of superiority over other cultures: faith in science, reason and progress. Technology counted as a measurement of the level of civilisation. Within the European context, the railway represented a step towards a higher degree of civilisation. Some of the speakers explicitly addressed the issue of civilisation. Zingg spoke about the spread of European culture throughout the world that the Gotthard Railway enabled.248 Varè pointed out how the construction of the Gotthard Railway proved the force of science to conquer mountains, not only in the interest of material goods, but also in the interest of civilisation and true progress.249 The other speakers alluded to the theme of civilisation by constantly addressing ‘universalised’ themes such as progress, prosperity, peace and technological superiority. They intertwined the process of modernisation with the process of spreading civilisation, not only to the colonies, but also to the countries involved. Bavier’s image of a Völkerfrühling captured it all: he presented the railways through the Alps as a bearer of ‘solidarity among nations, education (Bildung) and prosperity’.250 The Gotthard Railway represented another proof of European superiority. The speeches stressed the victory of science, technology and labour over nature; peace over war; and international cooperation over warfare. This civilising goal ‘legitimised’ the financial and personal sacrifices. The rhetoric employed during the events surrounding the Gotthard Railway inauguration captured the general tone of the late nineteenth century. The image was held up high, despite the visible and invisible cracks in European liberalist dream. Still, I argue that for the Swiss officials, being able to use this vocabulary demonstrates clearly that Switzerland played a role in the greater modernising and

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civilising process, alongside Germany and Italy. By embracing the language of civilisation, the Swiss government enforced its mission to play a more potent role domestically and internationally. Hosting the festivities and presenting the Gotthard Railway as a European link strengthened the developing self-image of Switzerland as presented by the liberal elite. Switzerland’s national liberal government wanted to break down barriers and open Switzerland to modern traffic, modern economy and modern life. The image of the Helvetia Mediatrix, in which Switzerland fostered international exchange, can be seen as a way to position Switzerland within the new European power balance. This envisioned role was under discussion between the 1870s and 1900; it functioned as a way to counterbalance the formation of ever more powerful neighbouring nation states. To balance powers in Europe, smaller nations founded international organisations to buttress their stakes. Switzerland positioned itself as a neutral country that harboured the headquarters of these organisations and served as an international trade axis.251 Talking about the Gotthard Railway as a civilising project placed the Swiss liberal government in the context of European modernisation, in which it aimed to obtain a role as mediator.

Bringing the news The Swiss public experienced the event through their regional newspapers. Swiss newspapers made much of the inauguration of the Gotthard Railway. Reports, poems and commentaries filled the front pages. Most Swiss newspapers offered comprehensive historical background about the railway construction to, as they said, refresh the readers’ minds.252 Moreover, ‘live’ reports came in from reporters of diverse large newspapers who travelled in the dignitaries’ trains over the Gotthard Railway to Milan. The reporters telegraphed their articles to their newspapers on a daily basis. In the newspapers, the rhetoric of the official speeches resonated. They hardly contested the representation of the Gotthard Railway as an important materialisation of European civilisation and technical superiority. Yet, the newspapers did more than simply diffuse the dominant official image. From the newspapers follows a more fragmented and contested appreciation of the Gotthard Railway. As in the speeches, the ‘heroic materialisation’ took different shapes. The poem at the beginning of this chapter, written by J. Bolliger for the breakthrough festivities in 1880 and printed in the liberal Schaffhauser Intelligenzblatt, called upon people to herald the new railways as a work of peace. The poem praised labour and dramatized the image of progress. Bolliger asked rhetorically:



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

“What drove the workers into the heart of the mountains?” Subsequently, he let the workers answer that they found pride in the work because they knew the whole world watched them, and the hearts of three nations beat to see the construction of the cleverest project in the world.253 Das Vaterland thanked God to have equipped humankind with intellect that gave it power over raw nature. It also commemorated those who gave their lives in service to science and technology.254 The Luzerner Tagblatt also argued that the human mind had conquered matter and that the Gotthard Railway presented the ultimate proof of the powers of united forces and human spirit and labour.255 On the day of the inauguration, a journalist of the Zürcher Post recalled how he had once travelled the Gotthard Pass during a snowstorm. An old woman had told him in Italian: “It would be a great thing, when the mountains were no more”. According to the reporter, these words of that ‘simple’ woman had been visionary: with the inauguration of the Gotthard Railway the mountains ‘are no more’.256 He referred to the Gotthard Pass as a physical barrier which, in winter, had hampered traffic. His comment illustrates how the Alps in the written press became much more tangible than the ones described in the official speeches. Despite the similarity in word choice, many newspapers openly questioned how the international linkage through Swiss territory would affect the political, cultural and economic life in Switzerland. In contrast to the speeches, the newspapers presented details about the Gotthard Railway and its history. Moreover, they paid special attention to the national, regional and local specificities and speculated about the ‘impact’ of modernisation on the Swiss national character. An analysis of the newspaper articles yields a variety of reactions to the Gotthard Railway. The reporters mobilised the image of the ‘Alps’ in a variety of ways to clarify their arguments. In their interpretation, the Gotthard Railway as ‘annihilation of the Alps’ contrasted with the existing and emerging practices, representations and narratives around the Alps in Switzerland. Journalists sketched the changing landscape of emotions along the festive train route. Four different representations of the Alps emerged.

Annihilation of past and future The newspapers illustrated that the Gotthard Mountains had been a passage point for a long time.257 The cantonal newspaper of the conservative and catholic canton Uri, the Urner Wochenblatt, referred to the festivities as ‘pompous’. It noted that the canton longed to regain stillness. Yet, its reporter realised that the stillness they hoped for would be stiller than the people of Uri would appreciate, since the new

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railway formed a threat to the lively pass economy of the canton Uri. The article refers to ‘our lovely little fatherland’.258 The reference to our fatherland is significant, since it refers here to a sense of belonging to the canton rather than to the Swiss nation. Uri, as a member of the Sonderbund, fought for cantonal sovereignty in the short 1847 war. The liberal dreams associated with the railways opposed those of Uri, both economically and ideologically because they marginalised the canton. A cynical little poem revealed the regional emotions, when it described each of the villages along the Gotthard Railway’s northern mountain route and discussed its negative impact for each of the villages. The last line is a cynical reference to the hymn of Friedrich Schiller ‘Ode to Joy’: ‘Be embraced, you millions, a kiss to the wide world’.259 The poem adapted the text and turned the word umschlungen (embraced) into verschlungen (gobbled up). (…) Altdorf: We wish you luck and good weather The congratulations might come later (…) Göschenen: Now we have the big hole, Still missing is the age of gold. (…) At the Gotthard: (In granite with golden writing) Be gobbled up you millions! Our greetings to the whole wide world (…)”260 Other newspapers also noted the lack of enthusiasm for the railway in the canton Uri that showed a sharp contrast with the warm welcome the trains received in the canton Schwyz, and the, even more colourful, welcome in Ticino. Whereas all other cantonal capitals along the Gotthard Railway organised festivities, the trains did not halt in Altdorf, the capital of canton Uri. Uri’s bitter reaction was understood; most writers explained that they realised that the population of the canton felt offended by the festivities and the official speeches. In the early nineteenth century, the canton Uri invested heavily in the reconstruction of the passage road to make it accessible for the horse-drawn mail coach. Completed in the 1830s, the new road became obsolete with the arrival



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

of the train.261 As Uri’s inhabitants feared, the arrival of the railways led to the deterioration of the economic situation in Uri and many residents were forced to emigrate.262 However, the dignitaries and festivities silenced the existing practices, economy and population that had facilitated the exchange of goods and people over the Gotthard as a passage point since the construction the pass in the 13th century. With the metaphor of annihilation, the actual past and future of Uri also vanished which did not pass unnoticed in the newspapers’ reports.

Specifying the ‘Alps’ The reactions to the celebrations also show that the Swiss expected the Gotthard Railway to harm other regions of Switzerland. Simeon Bavier, the Swiss president, who spoke at the inaugural festivities, wrote in his diary: “The misery of the people of Uri strengthened my conviction that the construction of Alpine passages mean that the alpine regions lose, whereas the centres win.”263 Before becoming a member of the Swiss national Council, Bavier had been a fierce opponent of the construction of the Gotthard Railway. Rather, he advocated the building of the Lukmanier tunnel, which would have favoured eastern Switzerland and his home canton Graubünden. Newspapers revived the fierce debates between the cantons in Switzerland prior to the Gotthard Railway construction. In the 1850s and 1860s, each of the planned tunnel projects favoured other regions (and other countries). The Gotthard Railway served chiefly the interests of several powerful Swiss cities and cantons, such as Basel and Zurich. The sentiments in the French-speaking west of Switzerland were similar. The inauguration brought back memories of the financial crisis of the Gotthard Railway and the fierce opposition of the Western cantons against the governmental subsidy. The Gazette de Lausanne hoped that France would support the construction of the Simplon Tunnel, to give the French-speaking part of Switzerland its own international railway line. This would “balance the commercial and political relationships between the cisalpine Europe and the Mediterranean basin”.264 Der Landbote, a democratic newspaper from the city of Winterthur, had been critical of the Gotthard Railway construction. During the editorship of Bleuler, the newspaper opposed Alfred Escher’s regime and thus his Gotthard Railway.265 During the inaugural festivities it wrote: We ought to remember that the railway connects the distant canton Ticino geographically, politically and spiritually with Switzerland. However, the railway removes a large part of the current alpine traffic from other cantons; it harms the cantons’ interests and reduces their vitality.266

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Like the canton Uri, the canton Graubünden invested heavily in the improvement of its road system. The inauguration of the Gotthard Railway scattered the hope that these investments would pay off. The Gotthard Tunnel marginalised the regions east and west of Switzerland but also linked the Italian-speaking Swiss canton Ticino at the south-side of the Gotthard Mountains. Moreover, the Gotthard Railway was expected to provide the southern canton Ticino with an economic advantage. The Journal de Genève remarked that railways would establish a link between Ticino and the motherland (la mère-patrie). It pictured Ticino as formerly deprived of information and difficult to reach in winter. 267 It described how the population of Ticino gathered to watch the trains pass and how the people chanted Viva la Germania, l’Italia, la Svizzera, il Gottardo!.268 Das Vaterland also argued that the breach in the wall finally linked the Swiss northern cantons with the southern canton Ticino.269 From the tone of the northern Swiss newspapers it is clear that Ticino formed a ‘special case’. The newspaper excerpts reveal the prejudice against their Italian-speaking compatriots.270 The Italian-speaking canton at the southern side of the Alps represented an outsider full of political tensions that joined the Swiss Confederation relatively recently, in 1803. The Basler Nachrichten described Ticino as a ‘problem child’ that would come closer to the ‘confederation’ with the construction of the railways.271 “May all hopes, attributed to this achievement, come true, May it be as a blessing to the Swiss confederation, and a reconciliation and peace-promise for Ticino.”272 By emphasising that the people from Ticino were ‘good Swiss citizens’, the writer of these lines implied that the connection to the ‘motherland’ was required to render Ticino a ‘civilised’ part of the Swiss confederation. The case of Ticino illustrates the importance that newspapers attached to the connection between the cantons and the motherland, to strengthen of a sense of belonging. The newspaper articles articulate a view of the Gotthard Railway as it both linked and de-linked parts of Switzerland not only to the European economic system, but also to the Swiss nation. The breach in the alpine wall that the official speeches described did not imply that every region in Switzerland would profit from the axis in the same way.

Alpine sublime The newspapers presented the Gotthard Mountains as more monumental than ever. The construction of the Gotthard Railway fortified the image of the Gotthard Mountains as a central element in the national symbolism of the Alps. The newspapers regularly zoomed in on the Gotthard region itself and they mobilised the existing narratives and images surrounding the Gotthard. The Gazette de Lausanne



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

provided an example of the embedding of the Gotthard Railway in a more regional and national narrative. The journalist compared the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel to the construction of the 13th-century Devil’s Bridge over the Schöllenen Gorge that supposedly made the Gotthard Pass accessible for international traffic. The Gotthard Railway dethroned the Devil’s Bridge, the journalist argued. To the author it seemed that the Devil returned to build the Gotthard Tunnel.273 Newspapers mobilised not only the regional narratives but also represented the region as the ultimate Swiss mountainous landscape. Describing the beauty of the scene along the tracks highlighted the image of the Gotthard Railway as a successful ‘taming’ of the capricious alpine nature: the Gotthard Railway made a beautiful new mountain area accessible. The newspapers advertised travel guides that could help the curious reader to discover this new area. According to a reporter of the Gazette de Lausanne travelling the Gotthard was worthwhile. He referred to its landscape in connection to his national pride. It seems really as if God accumulated all of nature’s beauty along the tracks for humankind to admire. While we see this superior beauty, we feel proud to be children of this country and to say that all these admirable things are ours, on our soil. The intelligence and energy to build this impressive work came from Switzerland’s children.274 Despite the representation of the Alpine sublime as a Swiss icon, the image could not smooth out all the tensions about national identity provoked by the inauguration of the Gotthard Railway.

Breaching through the Swiss nation landscape Newspapers juxtaposed the image of the annihilation of the Alps with the image of the Alps as an icon for Swiss national identity. In the last two decades of the nineteenth century, the intensified search for icons of national identity led to an increasing popularity of the Alps as a binding force for the Swiss population.275 The strength of this alpine image recurred in the newspapers’ representation of the Gotthard Railway. Journalists used the symbolism of the Alps as a metaphor to comment upon the arrival of the Gotthard Railway into this symbolic space. They typify Switzerland as a small and mountainous nation. At times, this contradicted the image of opening the Alps to international traffic through the annihilation of that same space. Journal de Genève, for example, described Switzerland as a ‘country surrounded by mountains’. As a result of this depiction, it presented the Gotthard Railway as a project against all odds. Ironically, this mountainous Switzerland now positioned

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itself on ‘the world’s major maritime route’ from the northern-European to the Italian harbours.276 The newspaper predicted that Switzerland would be transformed from “an isolated country at a cul-de-sac to a country with narrow ties to the world because it would possess important outlets”. The newspaper reporter expected that this ironic change in fate would also influence Swiss morals and spirit. Consistent with the journal’s political bent, he defined Swiss values in liberal terms: ‘a free people and completely independent’.277 To protect these Swiss values, he proposed to open the ‘gates’ for economic exchange but to lock them for political exchange to avoid compromising Swiss political attainments.278 In more negative terms, Der Landbote also pled for safeguarding Swiss independence. The newspaper criticized the way in which the speakers and other newspapers compared the Gotthard Railway to the grandeur of the Suez Canal. Its journalist argued that the magnitude of the Suez Canal surpassed the Gotthard Tunnel by far. Moreover, a comparison between the two projects should warn Switzerland, instead of filling its citizens with pride, since the Suez Canal illustrated how foreign powers ruthlessly seized control over Egypt. If Switzerland did not take care it would end up just like Egypt: under the claws of foreign colonial powers.279 Das Vaterland used the inaugural festivities to position itself politically as a catholic, conservative newspaper. It argued that the increasing ‘opening-up’ of the country endangered the Swiss self (das eigene Ich). It summoned its readership to sharpen their patriotic feelings and to cling to the Swiss ‘belligerent, brave and patriotic character’, with the Alps as their unconquerable fortress. Our heroic ancestors paid for freedom with their heart’s blood (….) Let us uphold this common treasure of all confederates, the republican freedom of citizens and cantons (…) then our mountains will remain what they were, despite the hole in the Gotthard: a wall from God, who created the iron in our soil and wanted no servants. 280 The journalist feared that the political relationships within Europe threatened Swiss neutrality. Therefore, Switzerland had to build up its own guaranties for neutrality. According to the writer, this required unity among the Swiss cantons and a political system that would respect the rights of everybody, especially with regard to religious freedom and equality.281 In contrast to the fears expressed by Das Vaterland, Der Bund, a liberal newspaper issued in Bern, embraced the opening-up of the country. According to its reporter it had been worth spending money on the festivities because the inauguration brought Switzerland out of its isolation.282 The reporter of the Gazette de Lausanne concurred: the festivities had clearly shown how much Europe appreciated Switzerland now that it offered an international passage.283



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

The different reactions to the celebrations illustrate that the Gotthard Railway triggered a discussion about the influence of modernisation on Swiss society. In this discussion, the Alps provided an ambiguous metaphor to discuss the blessings and threats of modernising Switzerland. The varied images of the Alps overlap and contradict each other. The Gotthard Railway became an icon of modernity that should fill the Swiss with pride; consequently it threatened to harm the specificities of a Swiss national identity in the making. The railways both strengthened Switzerland’s role as mediator in Europe and made it vulnerable to international politics. The breaching of the Alps heralded a turning point as well as a continuation of existing international cooperation. The Gotthard Railway promised to bring Switzerland prosperity and unity, whereas it clearly marginalised many regions in Switzerland.

Positioning Switzerland The construction and final inauguration of the Gotthard Railway and Tunnel took place in a Europe full of tensions. The breakthrough and the inaugural festivities of the Gotthard Railway were carefully planned events that sought to imprint the importance of the Gotthard Railway in the minds of an international audience. Central motto of the official festivities was ‘viribus unitis’, with united forces. This motto celebrated the international cooperation between Italy, Germany and Switzerland to realise the construction of the railway and tunnel. The international party of high-ranking officials attributed agency to the Gotthard Railway and presented it as a symbol and a carrier of European modernity and civilisation. Other nineteenth-century engineering projects provided the cultural resources on which to build the inaugural rhetoric. Depoliticised, de-historicised and universalised language echoed the general tone of civilising rhetoric Europe at the time. It fit the image Swiss officials wanted to evoke. The historian Oliver Zimmer argues that the cultural politics issued by the liberal state officials were meant to hold up an image to the outside world. Thus the liberal state cultural politics (…) were not designed for domestic consumption. Rather they were part of the cultural and political competition amongst nation-states. Recognition was to be acquired through conveying an image of national authenticity to the outside world.284 In conjunction with the image of European civilisation, the speakers presented the Gotthard Railway as an undertaking from which every country in Europe would

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profit. Moreover, discussing the Gotthard Railway in a spatial void made it possible to project numerous promises and wishes onto it. There was no room for discussing the price the Swiss had to pay for modernity and civilisation, nor for assessing which regions the Gotthard Railway linked or de-linked. The rhetoric overemphasised good intentions, in a tense period when every deed could be interpreted as aggressive towards other countries. It is tempting to regard the speeches as a cheap sauce to garnish a significant power play. Still, the rhetoric served the higher goals of the Swiss national government that tried to position itself between changing European powers. For the Swiss dignitaries, the Gotthard Railway materialised the wish to play a role as modern and civilised mediator in Europe, enabling international cooperation and exchange. It gave the Swiss liberal government a perfect occasion to present Switzerland to the outside world.

Negotiated willingness to change The reactions to the festivities in the news illustrate clashes between political preferences, religious backgrounds and cantonal identities with regard to the future of Switzerland. The national government’s aim to open up the country and to internationalise was met by a fear that Switzerland would loose its independence and freedom. This fear was not only heard in patriotic newspapers. Other newspapers also implicitly commented upon the rhetoric of ‘viribus unitis’ by pointing out that Switzerland risked being overrun by Germany and that Switzerland’s neutrality was used by Germany to create a direct linkage to its ally Italy. The newspaper articles connected the railways to the landscape by describing the engineering objects of the railways and beauty of the landscape along the tracks. In the more patriotic newspapers, this image of the Alps was subsequently linked to Swiss identity. From this patriotic perspective the Alps stood for Swiss pride, freedom, independence as well as for its heritage. By creating a breach into this symbolic Alpine wall, these characteristics were potentially threatened. The proclaimed self-image of Switzerland by the liberal Swiss government did not always fit the sentiments elsewhere in the country. Despite the different appreciation of the Gotthard Railway, the regional newspapers eventually seemed willing to accept the image of the Gotthard Railway as a positive change. The poem, quoted in the beginning of this chapter, was published in the liberal Schaffhauser Intelligenzblatt some days before the breakthrough of the tunnel. It presented the event as a milestone for Switzerland. It seems as if the newspapers eventually wanted to believe in the positive images created around the Gotthard Railway. They urged the readers to let (national) emotions overtake regional rationality. Even though some newspaper reporters openly doubted the



Celebrating the Gotthard Railway

blessings of the railway line, these doubts were swiftly brushed away. I argue that the attitudes of the newspapers illustrated the willingness to believe in the promises of the Gotthard Railway or at least give the Gotthard Railway the benefit of the doubt. The reporter of the Basler Nachrichten described how blasé and sceptical people had become, yet he expressed the will to believe in the promises of technology and science.285 He eventually judged that people might have been impatient and that in the course of time the promises of modernity would hold. Therefore, he called upon people to celebrate the Gotthard Railway as a ‘positive sign in dark times’. To him the Gotthard Railway was; “A sign that love is growing in people and that peace will reach more hearts of people, so that the spirit of dissatisfaction, of ignorance and rawness disappears.”286 In general, the newspapers conveyed a belief that the Gotthard Railway presented a step forward. Even the Urner Zeitung resigned itself to the new situation. “This is how times are changing”, the newspaper’s text ended.287 It hoped that the railway line would: Heal the wounds and bring happiness and blessing to the whole country (Gesamtvaterland). Let the Gotthard Railway not be the nail in the coffin of Swiss freedom (Schweizerfreiheit), as the competing parties prophesied in 1879.288 In a similar tone, Das Vaterland argued that the Gotthard Railway exemplified a ‘typically Swiss solution’: subjecting self-interest to the interest of the Gesamtvaterland.289 This meant that, even though Switzerland would be forced to change, the Gotthard Railway put Switzerland on the path to modernity. Swiss historians characterise Swiss society of the 1880s as a society willing to change (Wendebereitschaft).290 They often illustrate this with the Swiss national exhibition of 1883. This was an event in which the nation could be celebrated explicitly as a modern society. I argue that many of the analyses apply to the atmosphere captured during the Gotthard Railway’s inauguration. In many ways, the national exhibition and the Gotthard Railway mirror each other. The Swiss national exhibition offered an opportunity to showcase Switzerland, the Gotthard Railway and the glory of technology in general.291 The organisers planned the exhibition in 1882, with the railways opening in May, but unforeseen troubles forced a postponement. Finally, the national exhibition took place in Zurich in the summer of 1883. The previous three Swiss national exhibitions had been marginal events devoted to industry. In contrast, the organisers of fourth exhibition wanted to offer an event in which a broad public could experience the Swiss nation.292

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A closer look at the sentiments surrounding the national exhibition put into context both the newspapers and the dignitaries’ speeches during the Gotthard festivities. Central themes dominated the rhetoric and lay-out of the exhibition: the conquering of the Alps, the victory of humans over nature and the triumph of technology.293 However, in contrast to the Gotthard celebrations, dignitaries linked feelings of national pride explicitly with the image of technological prowess. Numa Droz, the Swiss president and successor of Simeon Bavier, spoke at the opening of the exhibition, where he glorified the era of technological progress that included accomplishments such as the postal and telegraphic unions, of the establishment of railways, the piercing of the Alps and the construction of the Suez and Panama Canal.294 He added an element of national pride when he linked the national exhibition directly to Swiss prowess. We should not shrink away from sentiments of national pride, when we move through the immense halls where the products of labour and national engineering are brought together. It proves how a small people, not favoured by nature, is capable of creating wealth, with its vigour and its focused attempts to favour peace and freedom.295 According to the historians Thomas Widmer and Hans-Ulrich Jost, contemporaries wanted to believe that these types of events heralded a new era. Jost argues that the 1883 national exhibition created a moral escape from the economic crisis by presenting Switzerland’s future as glorious.296 Technology offered a way to enter modern European civilisation. The newspaper accounts of the Gotthard Railway’s celebrations also suggest this readiness to position the Swiss nation prominently in Europe. Despite disagreement about the extent to which Switzerland should change, change itself was seen as a necessity. This change required a strong belief in Swiss unity, even when regional interests needed to be sacrificed for the common good of Switzerland. Repeated newspaper references to the Gesamtvaterland and Schweizerfreiheit demonstrate this. The link between Swiss unity, technological change and Swiss prosperity was strong. Metaphoric use of the Alpine landscape helped to position the Gotthard Railway as an icon of change, thereby enforcing expressions of Swiss national identity. To the ‘outside’ the metaphor helped to establish Switzerland’s image as an important mediator in Europe; to the ‘inside’ they expressed a brittle Swiss unity in which people wanted to believe.



Travelling the Gotthard

Chapter 3 Travelling the Gotthard

The inauguration of the Gotthard Railway gave the go-ahead for the railway’s first summer schedule for passenger trains. The line with its longest rail tunnel in the world could finally be admired by everyone who could afford a train ticket. Curiosity, and the National Exhibition, accounted for the peak in first class traffic in the early years. More than a million passengers travelled the Gotthard Railway in 1883, its first full year of operation.297 After the initial wave of enthusiasm, the line operated as a successful international railway line.298 The number of passengers on the Gotthard Railway continued to increase reaching two million in 1897.299 The tons of freight that passed on the railway exceeded all expectations. Soon the Gotthard transit surpassed the competing international alpine transit lines in Austria, Italy and France.300 To advertise the Gotthard Railway, travel guides emphasised the decrease in travel time. It offered tourists from north-western Europe an efficient connection to the popular Lake Maggiore, Lake Como and Lake of Lugano as well as to the cities Milan, Naples and Rome. Before the opening of the Gotthard Railway a trip from Lucerne to Milan took 32 hours. The travellers took the steam ship over the Lake of Lucerne and changed to a mail coach over the Gotthard Pass by which they continued further south. In 1882, the railways covered the same distance in nine hours and 21 minutes; in 1891, the improved connections reduced the travel time to seven hours and 44 minutes.301 Travel guides presented the Gotthard railway not only as the swiftest but also as the most impressive transit in Europe. Moreover, they noted the ease to plan and organise a trip: with the new railway people could visit Italy for a short period without laborious preparations.302 Yet, the fast connection threatened to marginalise Switzerland as a tourist destination because tourists would simply speed through Switzerland towards their Italian destinations. To prevent this from happening, an avalanche of leaflets, maps, posters and travel guides saw the light, which recommended tourists to visit the region with the Gotthard Railway.303 In a popular travel guide of that time, the German pedagogue, theologian and writer Woldemar Kaden wrote: “What a pity would it

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be when Switzerland would sink into a transit country. No, she has to – and will – stay the happy and beautiful destination (...)”304 Just before the construction of the Gotthard Railway commenced, the German pedagogue August Grube wrote a travel account entitled Ueber den St. Gotthard, ‘Over the St. Gotthard’.305 The experienced German travel guide writer claimed that travel guides had barely paid attention to the St. Gotthard Pass. In anticipation of the new railway line, he wanted to fix this grave ‘omission’ and present the region’s beauty to its full extent.306 After the tunnel’s breakthrough and inauguration, the published material about the Gotthard Railway increased. Several reprints and translations of the most popular guides appeared for twenty years until the Swiss Federal Railway bought the line in 1909.307 Travel guides presented the Gotthard region and its railways as the ultimate holiday destination.308 With the construction of the Gotthard Railway, new regions could be explored. In the attempt to create a new tourist experience, the writers used the available narratives surrounding the region and the Gotthard Railway and tinkered new storylines to promote the Gotthard as a commendable destination. This process facilitated the appropriation process of the Gotthard Railway in the Swiss socio-cultural landscape.

Through the lens of travel guides Cultural geographers hold that “sites are never simply locations. Rather, they are sites for someone and of something.”309 At the basis of spatial studies lies the pioneering theoretical work of scholars such as Robert Shields, Edward Soja and John Urry. Their works emphasise the importance of space-myths and space-images, as (often stereotypical) images labelled onto certain spaces. They also illustrate how closely spaces can be connected to the formation of collective identity.310 Understanding the role of spaces in society requires studying the process of how people give meaning to spaces. Moreover, studying space focuses on both the level of ‘social imaginary’ (collective mythologies, presuppositions) and interventions in the landscape (for example the built environment).311 In line with this body of thought, scholars argue that tourist sites do not develop spontaneously. Their studies on tourism accentuate that, to facilitate tourism, interested parties perform organisational and cultural work, ranging from enabling accessibility to managing expectations. Sociologists and geographers devote much attention to the practice of tourism and travel writing. Tourism –loosely defined – is a leisure activity that includes movement through space towards a destination where one stays for a limited amount of time.312 As these studies emphasise, it is



Travelling the Gotthard

a normative process which discloses information about social relationships and (collective) identity formation. In general, tourists visit places to find the ‘other’, something ‘special’ or ‘different’. To them, tourism meant a counter-experience to the ‘ordinary’ as experienced during work (paid or unpaid) and everyday life. By travelling a physical distance from the point of departure the sensation of going ‘somewhere else’ augments. In the late nineteenth century, the majority of tourists came from industrialised countries and lived in cities. Tourism was presented as a way out of their everyday, hectic lives. Based on these views of tourism, this scholarship also focuses on the way in which tourist sites are produced. Travel guides helped tourists prepare their trips. They gave practical information about train schedules, hotels and sites worth visiting. Several studies show how travel guides also communicate sets of visual and textual imageries to guide literally the tourist eyes – telling them what to see, where to go, how to appreciate it and why. Guides offered the cultural baggage to understand the extraordinariness of the sight(s) and provided a language to talk about and remember travels. In their guides, authors mobilised visuals and texts of existing stories, practices and traditions to present local colour, thereby enabling the tourists’ enjoyment of the place. Guiding the tourist where to ‘look’ to find the extraordinary often meant that local images became (re)invented, rehearsed and altered. Preparing the journey with a travel guide helped to develop, what the sociologist John Urry calls, the ‘tourist gaze’.313 Part of the charm of the tourist gaze lay in the promises of travel guides. In the nineteenth-century travel literature, creating a sense of anticipation became an essential feature to convey to the reader. Anticipation tickled the interest of a potential visitor for a certain place or region, as travel guides provided the fuel to start daydreaming and fantasising, through the sheer promise of intense pleasure. Before the actual visits, the places could be “imaginatively explored through cultural metaphors, allegories and fabrications”.314 Travel guides made the tourist look forward to what their texts had promised. Another part of the pleasure of travelling originated from the created sense of discovery. The nineteenth-century guides presented tourist regions as new places, where few people had gone before, that the reader could explore and conquer. The opening of a new railway line, such as the Gotthard Railway, offered an interesting opportunity to present the newly accessible regions as unexplored terrain to the curious traveller. In contrast to the created image of tourism as a voyage of discovery, the late nineteenth-century tourist infrastructure aimed at making tourism as comfortable and reproducible as possible.315 The technological and managerial infrastructure

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facilitated and enhanced the travellers’ adventure. Tourism into the Alps made it possible to experience simultaneously the sublime Alps and the sublime technology. Nature and technology became objects of the sightseer and spectacles in themselves. Moreover, technology played a critical role in creating the tourist site, not only by providing a tourist infrastructure but also by highlighting technologically these tourist’s sights. Technologies made the tourist gaze possible and altered it. Scholars demonstrate the importance of experiencing technological change to allow tourists to culturally appropriate both technology and identity.316 Paradoxically, travel guide writers actively participated in the production of the ‘unexplored extraordinary’, while at the same time they standardised it. Travel guides (re)produce images of tourist destinations to lure the traveller into visiting and appreciating the sites. In this process they transmit stereotypes, idealised images and prejudices in order to create the difference between ‘home and away’, ‘here and there’ and ‘us and them’. They offer us a lens through which to study both the production of a tourist site and the construction of identity. Travel guides give their readers, more or less, a standard package of cultural baggage and practical information to discover the ‘unexplored’. Tourist guides present the ‘exotic’ in an understandable language and in a comfortable way, to facilitate access to the new world. Hence, travel guides inform their readers about the places and the people to visit, but also disclose senses of identity. Social, geographical and cultural studies on tourism yield insight in the importance of tourism for understanding the construction of identities.317 Travel writing contributes to this establishment of social and cultural identity by voicing relationships between the known and the unknown in normative terms. There is a sense in which all travel writing, as a process of inscription and appropriation, spins webs of colonizing power, but to locate travel writing within this discursive formation also involves plotting the play of fantasy and desire, and possibility of transgression.318 Travelling to touristy destinations may change people’s appreciation of a personal or collective identity. Demarcating the ‘ordinary’ from the ‘exotic’ also create differences between ‘us’ and ‘them’. A closer look into the production of the Gotthard travel guides and Swiss tourism in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century increases our understanding of these processes in the Swiss historical context. The next section explores who was involved in the production and consumption of these representations of the Gotthard.



Travelling the Gotthard

Inviting tourists to the Gotthard Tourism to Switzerland developed in the early nineteenth century, when English tourists discovered Switzerland. After the pioneering years, the flow of tourists increased and demanded a suitable infrastructure that would enable them to explore Switzerland to its full extent. Until then, Switzerland lacked such an infrastructure. Swiss entrepreneurs gradually developed the Swiss tourist industry tailored to the wishes of the English. The number of hotels, restaurants, mountain guides and railways grew. Organised travels to Switzerland by the company Thomas Cook gave the industry an extra impetus. Cook negotiated with different Swiss companies and organisations to offer the growing number of English tourists a complete travel package.319 The infrastructure facilitated the growth of tourism in Switzerland. When the Gotthard Railway opened in 1882, tourism in Switzerland flourished. In the early nineteenth century, only the upper class could afford leisure travel. Later, middle class civil servants, doctors, scientists and traders became increasingly mobile. From the 1870s onward, the number of tourists to Switzerland increased as luxury travel became affordable to many.320 Especially the German middle class profited from the economic growth of Germany after the unification and found its way to Switzerland. By 1880, German tourists outnumbered the English. Germans benefited from the pioneering work of the early English tourists. By 1900, 20% of the tourists were Swiss citizens and about 33% German.321 Swiss tourist destinations changed as well during the nineteenth century. Larger Swiss cities lost tourists to the developing tourist infrastructure in the Alps.322 Advertised as paradises of peacefulness, the Alps rapidly gained popularity. The expanding Swiss railway network strengthened the development of the tourist resorts close to the mountains as they became more accessible. From 1888 until 1910, cities, such as Lucerne, Davos and Interlaken grew in popularity. Guides served as a way to advertise regions and cities. Since the 1870s, the role of travel guides changed from being transmitters of information to promotional material. This new trend in travel writing was a reaction to criticism about the pretended objectivity of early guides. Moreover, the old travel guides – full of practical information – could not keep up with the rapid changes in the tourist industry. The new guides mixed personal experiences with concrete suggestions for day trips, places worth seeing and information about the Gotthard Railway. That the guides had become sales pitches was not always hidden.323 The Gotthard Railway Company supervised the texts and illustrations. In 1891, the Gotthard Railway Company published its richly illustrated brochure Switzerland, the St. Gotthard

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Railway. In the next fifteen years, it would be translated into French and revised reprints of both versions appeared. ‘Compliments of the Gotthard Railway’ stated the cover of the brochure, making clear who paid the author, George L. Catlin.324 The Gotthard Railway Company financed and co-financed the production of numerous other travel guides. It did so in close cooperation with tourist offices and other managing companies of tourist spots, such as the management of steamships on the Lake of the Four Forest Cantons or the Swiss-Italian Lakes, and the companies that ran the cog wheels up the Rigi and Pilatus. The companies cooperated but sometimes under pressure. The Gotthard Railway Company, for example, actively summoned other parties to advertise in their booklets. If they declined, the company threatened to remove the reference to their hotel, railway or restaurant from the text. It hoped to profit directly from these regions’ popularity, by increasing the number of its passengers. The Gotthard Railway Company had the same aim as many of the other tourist organisations: to promote regional tourism. Throughout the second half of the 19th century, tourists flocked to Lucerne.325 The city presented itself as the ultimate starting point for the exploration of central Switzerland, particularly as the popularity of the Alps grew. Lucerne hoped to become directly connected to the Gotthard Railway to increase its role as a tourist resort and gateway to the Gotthard regions.326 Due to the financial crisis in the late 1870s, the Gotthard access route through Lucerne was cancelled and Lucerne had to wait until 1897 for its connection. Lucerne had a famous tourist industry before the opening of the Gotthard Railway and becoming a transit region would leave Lucerne empty-handed.327 The region sought ways to continue promoting its attractiveness. A tourist industry up the Gotthard mountain region and in Ticino still had to be developed. The Gotthard Railway formed a potential impulse for a tourist economy in those relatively poor regions.328 Famous foreign travel guide publishers took the Gotthard Railway inauguration as an incentive to include the Gotthard in their series. The most famous nineteenth century guide, the Baedeker, mentioned the Gotthard Railway in its guide on Switzerland (in connection to the region of Northern-Italy, Savoy and Tirol).329 Tourists in the late nineteenth century also knew other popular series, such as Leo Woerl, the Europäische Wanderbilder series, the Rechts und Links der Eisenbahn and Berlepsch.330 Swiss publishing houses printed the majority of the Gotthard guides of these publishers. The regionalised content of the guides explains why the Swiss publishers – and often regional publishers – issued them. Well-experienced travel guide writers, such the German Hermann Alexander Berlepsch, who nor-



Travelling the Gotthard

mally published with German houses, found a Swiss publisher for his Gotthard guide. Even though many authors came from outside of Switzerland, they were well-informed about the region and the railway and could communicate technical details of interest to their readers. Moreover, they were writers who gained reputations in Switzerland. The main target groups for the tourist guides were the middle to upper-class German-speaking travellers from the city because these formed the majority of travellers to Switzerland. The bulk of the guides addressed the German-speaking foreigner and the German-speaking Swiss citizen. For example, in the preface to his travel guide, Emil August Türler wrote that he hoped to “inspire Swiss people and foreigners alike”.331 The tone and style of the guides depended on the addressed audience. This becomes clear during the translation process of the work of Catlin, American consul to Switzerland. Soon after the English version came out in 1891, the Gotthard Railway Company ordered a French version and in 1901 a German one.332 The Gotthard Railway Company judged that a direct translation from Catlin’s text would not suffice for the ‘well-informed’ and ‘well-educated’ German speaking reader. Therefore, the German text elaborates more on certain sights (helical tunnels for example) and offers more background information.333 The tourist organisations secured the distribution of the guides among a large international audience. The Swiss publishing house Orell Füssli printed 10,000 copies of Catlin’s booklet. The Tourist Office in Zurich distributed 500 copies of the first English publication in Switzerland. Moreover, thousands of copies reached Britain, the USA and Canada. In 1896, during the National Exhibition in Geneva, the Gotthard Railway Company gave out thousands of brochures to visitors.334 Advertisements and reviews in newspapers and journals advertised the latest publications about the Gotthard Railway to the Swiss audience. For example, the Basler Nachrichten recommended the work of Koch von Berneck, J. Hardmeyer, and J.A. Honegger as valuable travel guides to read before visiting the newly opened Gotthard Railway.335 For promoting Carl Spitteler’s book abroad, the company wrote to travel agencies and cruise ships to include the book in their library.336 Moreover, in the nineteenth century, a system of bookstands in train stations served the traveller’s habit of reading in the train.337 Publishing houses set up series of travel books ranging from dictionaries to travel guides.338 Tourists could walk into a local bookshop and buy the Gotthard guides. Travel guides, as pleasant, easily-available reading material, presented the Gotthard Railway as more than a freight axis between industrial centres. Meticulously,

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the writers prepared the middle class Gotthard traveller for what to expect, where to look and how to appreciate it. In this chapter, I analyse the travel guides to answer the question: to what extent do their texts link the new Gotthard Railway to Swiss national identity? I will analyse the way in which writers prepared travellers for the trip to the Gotthard. In this process, they interweave the appreciation of both the railways and the symbolic Gotthard landscape. This textual tinkering process resulted in a ‘tourist gaze’ of the Gotthard region. In the early twentieth century, the development of Swiss domestic tourism and the nationalisation of the Gotthard Railway made experiencing the Gotthard into a ‘Swiss gaze’ in which standardised elements of the nineteenth-century travel guide descriptions reappeared, as I will conclude at the end of this chapter.

Left and right of the railway: the Gotthard as a destination Many of the travel guide writers had an intellectual and often pedagogic background that sounded through in their emphasis on the educational importance of travelling the Gotthard.339 The basic ingredient for making the Gotthard a destination in itself formed the presentation of the trip as a ‘mental journey’. The travel guide writers wrapped the Gotthard in a sequence of spiritual experiences that promised to surpass the physical sensations of the train traveller. They prepared the modern tourist to more than a leisurely trip through a carefully created image of the Gotthard Mountains. Part of the mysticism of the trip derived from the Gotthard’s undetermined geographical location. In 1883, Woldemar Kaden published a booklet about the Gotthard Railway and its surroundings entitled Die Gotthardbahn und ihr Gebiet, which was published in Italian as La ferrovia del Gottardo ed i suoi dintorni the same year. Kaden (1838-1907) had just quit his job as a qualified German teacher in Naples when his work on the Gotthard appeared. With other publications on Switzerland, he gained renown as a travel guide writer. In his Gotthard guidebook he exclaimed: “But the principle thing! The Gotthard! Where is the Gotthard? (...) His name only floats through the air; is everywhere and nowhere.”340 The geographical boundaries of the Gotthard seem to be understood as the mountainous area left and right of the Gotthard railway line and the Gotthard Pass above the tunnel. The travel guides explain that the Gotthard is not a summit but refers to a group of mountains. This adds to the difficulty to locate precisely ‘the Gotthard’ as a geographical space. Hardly any travel guide defined the boundaries of the Gotthard region and this contributed to the construction of the elusive atmosphere that many writers attempted to create.



Travelling the Gotthard

Moreover, the historical reflections in these guidebooks referred to naturalists, who, in the eighteenth-century, identified the Gotthard as an important watershed in Europe and hence the highest mountain massif in Europe. Similarly, many guides explained this symbolic function of the Gotthard as a unique geographic divide.341 Catlin noted, for example: The Gotthard is not, indeed, the highest mountain in Switzerland (…): still, it establishes its ranks as a mountain royal above all others, for the reason that the largest mountain ranges run along parallel with it, and incline toward it. (….) [W]e thus find here a crossing point, from which mountains, and streams radiate towards all four quarters of the heavens.342 Wilhelm Grube also picked up the image of the Gotthard as a junction, to emphasise it as a crossroad between German, Italian and Swiss peoples. The new iron rail would form a metaphoric ‘soft binder’ between people.343 Carl Spitteler, one of Switzerland’s most famous writers and later Nobel Prize winner, gave meaning to the Gotthard as a junction. Spitteler’s work is the most famous, eloquent account of the Gotthard Railway. In 1894 and the years following, the Gotthard Railway Company commissioned him to write about the Gotthard Railway in the Swiss newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung.344 In 1897, when Lucerne finally obtained its direct connection to the Gotthard Railway, the publishing house Huber bundled and published his articles in a little booklet entitled Der Gotthard. It cost three Swiss Francs and 4,000 were printed.345 Spitteler shared his experiences on the Gotthard with his reader in his – at times sarcastic – travel accounts, in which he reflected on the twenty years during which the Gotthard became a tourist destination. Spitteler noted that he felt more situated in Europe than anywhere else in the world when he visited the Gotthard. He explained that the Gotthard separated everything: the rivers run in all directions; to the north lies Germany; and to the south Italian culture dawns.346 The guides presented a visit to the Gotthard as educational and uplifting. 347 Catlin argued that the traveller would remember the Gotthard as “a solace for our troubled, an enlivenment for our weary moments, as long as we shall live [sic]”.348 Similarly, Grube concluded: The image of the Gotthard has something undefined, mysterious to those who have not seen ‘the Mountain’ with their own eyes and those who did not pass its roads. (...). This mystery, this joining of ambiguous features

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of one and the same thing increases the thrill that lies in the attempt to deconstruct (entwirren) and to explain, but also in the anticipation of the imagined images. This strengthens the urge to go and see the strange pass with one’s own eyes.349 The travel guides strengthened the Gotthard region as a worthy destination in itself. Grube’s summons to ‘see with one’s own eyes’ reveals this final importance: triggering a curiosity to visit the region. Focusing on the Gotthard’s intangibility and symbolic geographical centrality in Europe helped to strengthen the image of a trip to the Gotthard as first and foremost a mental journey.

To the ‘Urschweiz’ In Germany, travel guide publishers actively aimed at linking travelling with experiencing a sense of national identity. For example, after the German unification, in 1871, the German series Rechts und Links der Eisenbahn acquainted explicitly German citizens with their homeland. The series, under supervision of the famous German cartographer Paul Langhans, meant to strengthen the German sense of national identity and to ‘awaken love and enthusiasm for the German country and people’.350 In 1908, it commissioned Fridolin Becker, the famous Swiss cartographer and professor at the Polytechnikum in Zurich, to write an issue about the Gotthard Railway for the German series. Even though there is no equally explicit claim to either German or Swiss national identity, Becker did try to educate the readership about Swiss national history.351 The trip from Lucerne up to the Gotthard Tunnel formed an excellent trajectory to explain the importance of the region for Switzerland. The Gotthard Railway brought the tourist right through the heart of Switzerland, as Jakob Hardmeyer-Jenny (1826-1917) explained. In 1882, this Swiss editor of Europäische Wanderbilder wrote a booklet on the Gotthard Railway for the series.352 He was a well-known Swiss travel guide writer and former teacher.353 His booklet grew to be one of the most popular Gotthard guides, as the number of reprints shows. Hardmeyer explained how the train passed the Swiss canton Schwyz, which gave its name to die Schweiz, Switzerland. He continued to describe how the train moved through the canton Uri, in which two key events happened that became closely related to the foundation of the Swiss confederation. In the thirteenth century, at the feet of the Gotthard Mountains, three representatives of Swiss regions pledged the Oath of Alliance and William Tell shot an apple off the head of his son.354 Hardmeyer – with some elitist disdain – told the reader why he focused extensively on these legends and myths surrounding the region. “People vehemently



Travelling the Gotthard

cling to well-known legends, even though historical evidence might have altered the true storyline.” He said he understood these sentiments because “For normal people, as for educated ones, the story has become a gospel of freedom, tightly linked to the Gotthard region”.355 Hardmeyer demonstrates that the popularisation of the Gotthard Railway paralleled the revival of historical sites and legendary places in Switzerland. After the foundation of the Bundesstaat the search for historical fundaments found concrete shape in history textbooks, buildings and monuments. In the 1880s and 1890s, the ‘historical’ Tell chapel was rebuilt; Richard Kissling’s famous Wilhelm Tell monument was erected in Altdorf; and he designed his sculpture for Lucerne’s railway station Zeitgeist. The latter sculpture formed a direct reference to the construction of the Gotthard Railway.356 The possibility to visit these places by train added to the attractiveness of the Gotthard and strengthened their importance. Even though the train did not directly pass these places, it gave the traveller the option to get of the train and visit them. The description of these possibilities gave a sense of the historical importance of the region crossed by train. In general, travel guides made the tourists aware that the region through which they travelled had a special meaning for Switzerland. Travelling to the Gotthard meant travelling to the heart of Switzerland – the Urschweiz. To quote Spitteler: The Gotthard Railway takes us to the heart of Switzerland, right through two of the most important primeval cantons [Schwyz and Uri]. Tell and Stauffacher, Rütli and the hollow road, Altdorf and Bürglen, Schwyz and Uri are (…) names with a familiar sound.357

A technological and natural sublime In addition to serving the mind, travelling the Gotthard Railway pleased the senses. The railways played a prominent role in the Gotthard guides, if only because the opening of the Gotthard Railway formed the immediate cause for the majority of these publications. Alternative ways to travel the Gotthard, by foot or mail coach, became secondary to the railways. The railway line also defined the guides’ logic because the tracks provided the backbone to which the textual excursions always returned. The real ‘thrill’ of the Gotthard Railway started up in the mountains, if one believed the travel guides of the time.358 Here, the heavy steam train started its climb toward the Gotthard Tunnel. The guides summoned the traveller to stop reading and simply enjoy the view. “From this point onward, one should read the

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Back cover of the travel guide from J.A. Honegger, Gotthard in Bild und Wort, 1880

description (with a pencil near at hand) either before the trip over the Gotthard – or afterwards. During the trip one should only look.”359 According to the guides, the mountainous parts offered the most spectacular views and the most cunning engineering solutions to overcome the differences in height between the valley (about 500 meters) and the Gotthard Tunnel (1,100 meters). Here, the travellers entered the domain of technological and natural marvel. The guides paid ample attention to the technological details of the railway construction, its history and its international importance. The texts provoked a sense of technological wonder. Before the inauguration, a triumphant tone already dominated the descriptions.360 The tone and style with which the railway line is presented strongly resembles the dignitaries’ speeches during the inaugural festivities. The guides encompassed the major rhetorical themes that surrounded large-



Travelling the Gotthard

scale projects in the nineteenth century. The portrayal of the Gotthard Railway as the vehicle of modernity and civilisation served the audience with a recognisable rhetoric.361 The construction of the Gotthard Tunnel received most attention. Judging from the amount of technical information about geology, tunnelling method, compressed air, ventilation and drills, the guides’ authors assumed a great interest in technology of the part of their readership.362 Jakob Adolf Honegger, an art teacher, published a booklet, Der Gotthard in Bild und Wort, in which he sketched the new railway lines in word and visuals before the tunnel’s breakthrough in 1880.363 He zoomed in on the technical details of the Gotthard Tunnel construction with multiple illustrations, showing: people feeding a locomotive with compressed air; a drill at work in the tunnel; and the air reservoirs in front of the compressor house in Göschenen.364 The Berlepsch guide Die Gotthard-Bahn und die Italienische Seen offered its readers a nine-page political and technical success-story of the construction.365 The author, Hermann Alexander Berlepsch, was of German origin but had lived in Switzerland since 1848.366 In the second half of the nineteenth century, his established Berlepsch series published on Switzerland and on some specific Swiss regions. He had also published an article on the Gotthard Tunnel construction in Petermann’s Mittheilungen.367 In his Gotthard guide from 1882, Berlepsch wrote a separate section on the tunnel, entitled: “Trip no. 33 ‘the grand tunnel’.” It detailed the location, history and technical specificities of the tunnel, explaining the hardship in its construction. For some guides, a shorter history of the Gotthard Tunnel construction sufficed but some accounts appeared in every guide.368 The travel guide writers did not confine their technological descriptions to isolated blocks of texts. Instead, the texts manoeuvred smoothly between the technological eye-catchers and natural sights. As Kaden put it: “Because the Gotthard Railway is a miraculous work (Wunderbau); and the land around the Gotthard is a wonderland (Wunderland), both towards the North and the South!”369 From the early descriptions of the Gotthard railway onward, the trip becomes presented as a way to enjoy simultaneously the ‘wonders of technology’ and the ‘magnificent mountain scenery’.370 The guides used superlatives to explain the exalted beauty of the Gotthard region.371 The sublime of nature returned regularly in the descriptions and paralleled the tone used to describe technological prowess.372 Through the descriptions it seemed that the Gotthard landscape and the Gotthard Railway enhanced each other’s sublime.

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The guides advised the traveller where to sit to get the best view, even though the advice differed per guide. The wealth of nature required a constant shift of train seat – there is simply ‘too much’ to look at, wrote Spitteler.373 According to Berlepsch, the railways constantly confronted the tourist with the choice to enjoy the beauty from the train or to explore the region by foot. He explained that the road offers an ‘ultra-romantic tension’, and unfortunately the train only allowed for a ‘short and incomplete impression’ of the impressive landscape.374 Catlin praised the luxurious seats, which allowed the traveller to admire rough and wild nature in all comfort. The arrival of the train is represented as if it unveiled the aweinspiring nature. Then (…) came the Gotthard railway: piercing mountains, spanning chasms, bridging torrents, and scaling heights, and forming, in its entirety, the grandest engineering triumph of modern times. In this slow, but steady development from the dizzy, unfrequented footpath to the solidly constructed, granite-embedded railway, we can read the whole story of the growth and progress of science and civilisation.375 Spitteler praised the railway for solving the technical problems in such a way that it made milestones of the most interesting sights nature had to offer.376 In 1906, just after the opening of the Simplon tunnel, Mikael Schnyder, in a feuilleton of the Lucerne newspaper Das Vaterland stated: “Everybody knows to what extent the technological wonders of the Gotthard enhance the landscape effects.”377 The travel guides represented the Gotthard Railway as a sublime spectacle comparable to popular tourist attractions, such as the cogwheel ride up the Mountain Rigi.378 Since 1871, this cogwheel offered tourists a comfortable way to reach the top and admire the view. Viewing the Rigi panorama had been a fashionable trip but before the advent of the train, it required a long walk up the mountain. Tourist guides praised the Rigi experience as a combination of enjoying a cunning engineering solution and a rewarding view of the Swiss Alps. The Gotthard Railway came to be described as just as fashionable as the cogwheel up the Rigi.379 In the travel guides’ representations, it seemed as if engineers had built the Gotthard Railway solely for the pleasure of the landscape tourist.

Wassen; the Gotthard as a roller coaster Spitteler wrote that “after all, the Gotthard Railway is neither a mountain railway nor an entertainment railway (…) but rather an international traffic route”. 380 He merely tried to put things in perspective because the majority of the travel guides



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described the Gotthard Railway primarily as an entertainment railway. Catlin presented the Gotthard as a ‘summer pleasure trip’.381 (…) [T]he glistening steel tracks of the Gotthard railway, which has conquered this wilderness and transformed its fastness into a pleasure ground for man.”382 The descriptions of the helical tunnels close to the village of Wassen exemplify this. In 1880, two years before the opening, Honegger described Wassen as a friendly village with remnants of its former culture of orchards and gardens.383 However, the village Wassen (also referred to as Wasen) was transformed into one of the most commonly described and depicted scenes of the Gotthard railway. Spitteler, seventeen years later, sighed when he came to the obligatory description of Wassen: “Do I have to describe for the one-thousand-and-second time what has been described one-thousand-and-once already?”384 Indeed, no travel guide passed up the opportunity to tell the traveller to pay notice when the train arrived in Wassen.

Map of the helical tunnels close to the village Wassen in the travel guide of Hermann Alexander Berlepsch, 1882 (page 128)

Close to Wassen, engineers built three helical tunnels to bridge the 600-meter difference between the valley and the Gotthard Tunnel. The train entered each of the tunnels and continued its climb while bending 360 or 180 degrees. As a consequence of these loops, a train heading north could suddenly run south for a while, before entering a new tunnel that would make the train revert southwards again. The travel guides educated the traveller in advance about how to appreciate the helical tunnels. The church tower of Wassen became the classical reference point to orient oneself during the curving of the train. The spiralling of the tracks in the vicinity of the same village meant that the same views could be enjoyed from several different angles. The helical tunnels resemble a roller coaster on its side, with its loops and curves. The descriptions and illustrations strengthened this roller coaster image

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further: the sense of loosing direction and coming out dizzy. The Berlepsch suggested the traveller getting off the train in Wassen to enjoy the amazing windings of the tracks from below.385 Hardmeyer noted: The traveller, without a map at hand or an engineer nearby, looses all sense of direction. The train curves are hardly noticeable because it happens in the belly of the mountain. One feels that the train moves because the church of Wassen appears over and over again – above, behind, beside and underneath.386 Fridolin Becker in Links und Rechts der Eisenbahn sighs when the train takes it normal course again: it was almost too much.387 The Wassen scenery became imprinted in the traveller’s mind: travel guides inserted maps of the situation around Wassen; illustrators all chose the same angle to depict the scene; and the textual descriptions are all alike. All these maps, drawings and tips for orientation had to prove helpful tools for explaining and visualising the helical tunnels. They also enhanced the feeling of anticipation before entering the Wassen scenery. If there was anything left of the dull image of the Gotthard Railway as an international axis for freight, the increasingly standardised spectacle of the helical tunnel helped to change this image radically.

Göschenen; the last stop before the tunnel Göschenen offered the travellers a moment to catch their breath. The little mountain village became a melting pot during the ten years of construction work. It harboured hundreds of workers and engineers from all over the world. Honegger and Berlepsch described the little village as the ‘city of the future’388. However, after the tumult of the construction, Göschenen reverted to the provincial town it once had been. Nevertheless, it would preserve some of its fame. The buffet at Göschenen station offered the travellers a quick lunch before the train would continue through the tunnel. After 1900, the station buffet increased in fame because the famous Swiss writer and poet Ernst Zahn took it over from his father.389 In Göschenen the road and the railways separated and the traveller needed to make a choice of how to continue the trip.390 Catlin wrote in 1891: We are at Göschenen, the northern point of entrance to the great tunnel, through the St. Gothard, the longest tunnel in the world. Here the railway, and its old-fashioned companion, the stage-coach, part company for a while, the former passing into the darkness of the tunnel, to emerge



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later at Airolo, on the Southern, or Italian side of the mountains, while the latter follows its time-honoured, winding, and picturesque way, through the Schöllenen, and over the Devil’s Bridge, to Andermatt, Hospenthal, and the Hospice at the summit, and thence down again through the Val Tremola, to Airolo, where it rejoins the railway.391

Postcard of the Gotthard region (undated). Courtesy Swiss National Library

In Göschenen, the guides confront the traveller with a choice. Until Göschenen, the description of the travel guides combined the technological sublime and the natural sublime. Now, they separated and visitors could enjoy their ultimate and contradictory form. One of the rare Italian travel guides by Boniforti recommended

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“the walk or mail coach from Airolo to reach the Hospice on the pass as a must for the leisure travellers who like steep climbing.”392 Another Italian guide from professor Brusconi, member of the Italian Alpine Association, described the Gotthard Railway from south to north but presented the north-south trip from Göschenen to Airolo as an interesting detour to make, either by foot or mail coach.393 This exemplifies the way in which this alternative route became a fixed part of enjoying the Gotthard Railway.

The realm of the mail coach vs. enlightenment of the tunnel The guides described the old road as a romantic relic of a lost past.394 Train and mail coach became two opposing images. The guides advised the hasty traveller to take the tunnel and the tourists with passion for mountain sceneries to choose the route over the Gotthard. The road over the Gotthard became one of the most commonly described routes.395 The descriptions of the tunnel emphasised: speed, darkness, progress, science and technology, while the narratives about the passage over the mountains highlighted: high alpine nature, nostalgia, slow pace and silence.396 Türler described how the lost battle of the mail coach horse with the iron horse (Dampfros literally means steam horse).397 Honegger predicted in 1880 how the lively pass road would become desolate, once the train won the battle against the horses; only a hiker would disturb the silence now and then.398 Hardmeyer quoted an old woman speaking in vernacular: “It seems as if even the birds take the tunnel”. He painted images of the train as a ‘fiery horse’ that turns the horse of the mail coach into ‘an old, faithful nag’.399 An Austrian engineer, who visited the Gotthard works in 1879, prophesied that the haste, connected to train travel, would destroy the pleasure of a tour through the mountains: “People become transit goods and as a consequence, the Schweizerreise in Goethe’s style will be lost”.400 Many other writers, presenting the arrival of the train in opposition to the mail coach, shared the feeling of loss.401 The peacefulness on the pass presented the traveller with the opportunity to experience alpine nature in its entirety, as the travel guides claimed. The counter icon of the railway became the mail coach and the coachman, Aloys Zgraggen. He conducted the legendary last mail coach over the Gotthard, before the Gotthard Railway took over the mail services. The guides describe Zgraggen as a stoic hero, exemplary for the nature of the people who lived and worked around the transit axis. The coachman travelled the Gotthard through all types of weather.402 The alpine men are made of ‘steel and iron’, and are able to deal with the bad weather conditions of the Alps. Nothing stopped them in their duty to bring people and



Travelling the Gotthard

Postcard of the last post coach with its mailman Aloys Zgraggen (1901). Courtesy Swiss National Library.

goods safely to the other side of the mountains.403 The image of the black and yellow mail coach with its bearded coach man would develop into a central icon of the region in the travel guides.

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When the travellers decided to continue their journey through the tunnel, the guides gave tips on how best to appreciate the tunnel. Kaden explained to his readers that, before entering the tunnel, it is important to remember the labour required to construct the tunnel, which now seemed such a simple dark hole.404 Der Gotthard, einst und jetzt, Gotthard once and now, published by the famous German travel literature publisher Leo Woerl gave its readership an idea of the ‘immense difficulties’ encountered by architects and engineers. Its anonymous author describes a winter tour through the Gotthard Tunnel during the final years of its construction. The colourful description confronts the reader with a ‘heroic battle of the workers’ against the ‘mighty Gotthard nature’.405 Catlin dramatised the construction of the tunnel as well. To his English speaking audience, he wrote: “And now, directly before us, a short distance from the station at Göschenen, yawns the great tunnel through which we are to pass. Its history and descriptions form a romance in themselves.”406 Catlin then gave a short summary of the tunnel’s history, in which the death of Louis Favre and the many workers played a central role. The stories made sure the traveller had a sense of the hardship with which the tunnel had been constructed. Spitteler, in the section on the Gotthard Tunnel, described his feelings while taking the tunnel. “Surely nobody entered the tunnel without a certain festive and tantalising anxiety.” According to Spitteler the experience of being in the tunnel for half an hour would never radically change, even when one would travel the tunnel often. “The darkness of the tunnel resembles any ordinary cellar darkness; however, one feels the need to develop special thoughts in the tunnel.” Ominously, Spitteler added: “What to think when the devilish screaming of the rock kills all sweet thoughts?”407 Johann Victor Widmann, teacher and vicar in Bern, hinted at the exceptional tunnel experience in his travel account about his many trips to Italy. He described how people fell silent in the train because of the sudden darkness of the tunnel. In his account Jenseits des Gotthard (on the other side of the Gotthard) he comforted the traveller that the tunnel was probably the safest part of the tracks.408 The artificial tunnel atmosphere brought the passengers both fear and comfort. Upon entering the tunnel, the guides urged the travellers to check their watch, to get a sense of the amazing speed with which one passed through the tunnel. Almost all guides told the readers to expect the ride to take approximately 20 minutes. They also gave guidance on how to reduce the feeling of disorientation. Lights lit the tunnel wall which gave both a sense of security and of entertainment during the 20 minutes in the tunnel. The travel writers advised their readers to



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use the lights as points of reference to define their position in relation to the surface. Observant travellers could count the number of lights and estimate where in the tunnel they were. “The second light flames up directly underneath the Devil’s Bridge”, Berlepsch explained. Dividing the 20 minutes of the ride by 15 (length of the tunnel) indicated the position of the train relative to surface structures, such as the Urnerloch or the St. Anna glacier. Berlepsch thus connected the tour over the Gotthard Pass with the route through the tunnel to give the traveller a sense of orientation. The historian Rosalind Williams describes that for the nineteenth-century middle and upper-class people, the underground was a completely new experience, which, until then, had only been connected to working class labour in mining.409 The Gotthard Tunnel was the longest train tunnel in the world at that time. The 20 minutes of darkness must have been an alienating experience and worrisome prospect for the travellers. The travel guides convinced travellers that they were safe and attempted to entertain them during the ride through the tunnel. The experience presented a confrontation with modernity. Checking one’s watch and assessing one’s location gave travellers a sense of being in control while it also gave a sense of the tunnel’s magnitude. Dramatised historical accounts of the construction period added to these sensations. The dialectical representation of the two routes juxtaposed and enhanced the nostalgic experience over the mountains with the modernist experience through the tunnel.

“Italy!” The dramatic tunnel experience enhanced the anticipation of emerging from the tunnel again. The majority of the travellers coming from Germany headed for tourist resorts in Italy, like the Lakes of Northern Italy, the city Milan or further down south to Naples and Rome. With the construction of the Gotthard Railway, a trip to these popular resorts became easier and faster. Although many of the guides promoted the Gotthard as a destination, for many of the travellers it was merely a passage point towards the south. The majority of the guides described and depicted the Italian Lakes or Milan as the final destination. Relatively new was the attention the guides gave to the villages on the Swiss villages on the lakes, in the canton Ticino: Lugano (Lake of Lugano) and Locarno (Lake Maggiore).410 The southern side of the Alps offered the traveller different views, different people and different landscapes. The guides presented the Gotthard Railway as the tracks that carried tourists fast and safely to exotic destinations on the southern side of the Alps. For this purpose the texts and images emphasised the ‘apparent’ differences

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Brochure of the Gotthard Railway from 1904. Courtesy Schulmuseum Bern, Köniz

between the north and the south. The guides joined in with the supposedly inborn desire for the sun, experienced by people from the north.411 The transition from the darkness of the tunnel into the light offered an added value to travelling the Gotthard. Spitteler writes that the most beautiful part of the Gotthard tracks lies on the northern part but that it would feel unnatural to return home before seeing the southern side – to ‘balance the soul’.412 The image of balance and contrast recurs, for example when the text of Hardmeyer exclaims “Immensee, Como!” Immensee is symbolic for the simple, green, shadowy villages on the northern side of the Alps; Como represents the clear, colourful, bright villages of the south. 413 Between the two villages lies the ‘sublime’ Alpine wall with its impressive natural monuments and the long tunnel underneath. The carefully crafted opposition in culture and language was further strengthened by the emphasis on the difference in the landscape and weather conditions. The ultimate Gotthard experience became defined as departing from Göschenen in snow or rain and emerging from the tunnel to a sunny blue sky.414 The text in the Woerl sketches the tour through the tunnel from Göschenen to Airolo as a succession of encounters with the darkness of the tunnel, the sounds of the drills and heat of the mountain. While describing the walk towards the south through the – still unfinished – tunnel, the darkness slowly withdraws and the light takes over. The author explains how he saw the sun through the southern tunnel portal while it illuminated the church towers in the southern landscape: “Here



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everything is light and clarity”. He continued: “In this dreamlike soft shine appeared, like a Raphaelian angel painted on a golden background, – Italy!”415 With this sentence the author ends the description of the tour. In these few lines, he managed to evoke a set of spiritual images that seem to reinforce the symbolic role of the Gotthard Tunnel as a space of transition.416 From the travel guides it is not clear where Italy actually started but it did not really seem to matter. The Gotthard as a demarcation line between north and south became the trademark of travelling the Gotthard. In 1906, Schnyder stressed that, in contrast, the Simplon missed the true feeling of moving from the North to the South that the Gotthard so clearly offered. 417 The difference between the North and the South was not only represented in terms of the landscape. The travel guides described the people on the southern side of the Gotthard differently from those on the northern side of the Alps.418 The journey, as Osenbrüggen described it, would lead to a region where the people looked like Italians but still belonged to Switzerland. “Original is the land, and original are its people. They are children of Mother Helvetia, often restless and in need of discipline, but they are full of love and have the ability to learn.” 419 The Berlepsch sees the tunnel as a fast way – “within half an hour” –­ to get from one cultural sphere to the other. Nature, people, language, situation, education and life styles on both sides of the Gotthard differed greatly from each other. The Italian population differed from the ‘German race’. He described them as livelier but clearly less hygienic. The further south, the worse it gets, warned Berlepsch.420 The positive connotations of the south mixed with paternalism of the travel guide authors. Their distinction between ‘us’ from the ‘north’ and ‘them’ from the ‘south’, is loaded with normative values: The exotic ‘them’ is also ‘uncivilised’. This characteristic added to the tourist experience and made the traveller relieved to return home again after the visit. Spitteler compared a feeling of being at home – where he knew the path well – with his feelings at the Gotthard. Fast, in rapid succession and – what I stress especially – completely is how the Gotthard wants to be enjoyed – if possible within one summer – through multiple wanderings that are continued until the different parts merge, of themselves, into a whole. Then one can appreciate the immense image in the correct proportions. Then one can travel through the Gotthard later with Heimat feelings. Then the Gotthard can transform from an obstacle to a bridge – then Italy will shine for a lifetime into one’s northern present; for where we know the path well, the destination is near.421

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When Johann Victor Widmann returned home from his trip to Italy, he also admitted that the trip from Göschenen to Andermatt made him appreciate his country more than ever because of its extreme alpine beauty.422 Returning home to civilization and the recognisable Alpine nature gave the tourist a perfect ending to an exotic trip, which had brought him from Lucerne through the heart of Switzerland, on the roller coaster of the Gotthard Railway, over the pass or under the mountain towards Italy. The creation of a sharp cultural boundary between the northern countries and Italy, as well as the ease with which the Gotthard Railway allowed one to cross the boundary, had both negative and positive results for Ticino’s identity. In quantitative terms, the popularity of Ticino as a holiday destination grew from 5.3 % of the Swiss total in 1895 to 10.5% in 1910, bringing with it economic growth.423 The construction of the Gotthard Railway line and the alpine railways in general accounted for this increase.424 The upswing of Ticino as a tourist destination also had negative effects. The economic dependency of Ticino on Switzerland and the colonisation of the Italian speaking canton by German-speaking guests triggered an identity crisis among natives in Ticino before the First World War. They feared the loss of their language and culture and demanded more political influence in Swiss national affairs.425 They felt they paid a high price for wealth and a closer connection to the rest of the country.

The Gotthard Railway as experiencing Switzerland In 1891, Catlin wrote that the Gotthard Railway had become a ‘household word’ throughout the ‘civilised world’.426 As the Gotthard Railway gained fame, the tourist guides developed standardised narratives of the Gotthard experience. Despite some individual touches, the travel guides showed much consistency in their descriptions of the Gotthard destination. At the turn of the century, Carl Spitteler also observed a standardised appreciation of the Gotthard trip. Looking back on 15 years of travel guide writing and travelling, his travel account can be understood as a critical reflection upon this tourist gaze. In this section, I will draw some conclusions about the way in which travel guides described the Gotthard during the belle époque. Later, I will confront this with descriptions during the 1930s. The late nineteenth and early twentieth-century guides proposed travelling the Gotthard Railway as a multilayered way to experience Switzerland. Travel guides positioned the Gotthard Railway into the existing discourses about the attractiveness of Switzerland, as the ultimate country for landscape tourism. Even though



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authors rarely referred explicitly to a sense of Swiss national identity, they educated the interested traveller about the centrality of the Gotthard region for Swiss history. Well-informed writers – from both outside and inside of Switzerland – offered their perspectives on the Gotthard, influenced by the taste of tourists and nationalist developments within Switzerland. In the attempt to make the Gotthard a worthy destination accessible by Gotthard Railway, the authors produced a Gotthard image that built upon various elements: the existing symbolism of the Gotthard as a geographical space, the developing icons of Swiss national identity, and new sights, views and stories surrounding the newly constructed railway. Through this tinkering they embedded the Gotthard Railway within the symbolic Gotthard landscape and they presented the Gotthard Railway as the ultimate experience of Switzerland. Scholars have argued that Swiss national identity is partially based on the ability to tame this Alpine nature: despite the mountains, the Swiss managed to create farmland and passage points.427 The historian of technology Daniel Speich concludes that the perception of the Gotthard Mountains as a natural sublime amalgamated with the sublime of modern technology. This fusion became a reproducible aesthetical event.428 Even though the Gotthard Railway was not constructed as a tourist attraction, the travel guides described it as such. The mountain trains became events in themselves that brought tourists to exceptional places from which they could view the Alpine panorama.429 The Gotthard Railway even allowed two perspectives on the landscape: a romantic one over the mountains and a modern one through the tunnel. The aesthetics of technology and nature did not oppose but rather enhanced each other. I add that it became a sensual event: the eyes enjoyed the sublime view on technology and landscape; the body felt the turning through the tunnels; the tunnel air and sound tickled nose and ears; and the Gotthard’s intangibility as a divider and unifier of contrasts stirred the mind. Travel guides described the Gotthard Railway as a complete sensory event, which embedded the railway smoothly into the mental landscape of the tourist. Swiss history explicitly recurs in the historical narratives of the Gotthard guides. The travel guide writers wove regional narratives together with a developing historical identity of the Swiss nation. The construction of an increasingly fixed Swiss national history and of Swiss national icons created a crystallisation point at the region at the northern side of the Gotthard. Travel guide writers used this when presenting the Gotthard Railway as a trip to the heart of Switzerland. The railway passed the historical birthplace of the Swiss nation. References in the texts to the

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Urschweiz are therefore not innocent remarks but rather signal important landmarks in Switzerland of that time. Contrasting the ‘German race’ with the ‘Italian’ augmented the sense that the Urschweiz was ‘home’ and the Italian region south of the Gotthard ‘exotic’. Travel guides presented the railway as a track that meandered through the Swiss historical landscape. Travel guide writers also emphasised the appreciation of the trip as a mental journey. The trip allowed a reflection on personal and collective identity. The existing images of the specificity of the Gotthard’s geographical space strengthened the sensation of being spatially and spiritually separated and far away from everyday life. Often, the guides presented the Gotthard as an active, undefined presence ‘floating’ through the air. This intangibility endorsed profound reflection. Apart from mundane descriptions, the imagery presented the Gotthard as a Saint or an ancient spirit. By emphasising the sublime of the alpine landscape, especially when taking the route over the pass, the Gotthard region is presented as an anti-structure to modern life in the cities. At the same time, the Gotthard Tunnel formed an ultimate anti-structure through its air of modernism. These elements fed the feeling of anticipation and helped the traveller to experience the specificity of the Gotthard region in the most profound way. The authors presented the Gotthard passage point as being in the middle of extremes: the Gotthard separated waters, alpine chains, languages and cultures. For travellers the tunnel marked the transition from one extreme to the other. While passing the Gotthard, the travellers both noticed and dissolved these contrasts – experiencing in this manner the symbolism of the Gotthard Mountains as uniting and dividing. Coming ‘home’ after a Gotthard trip meant one had accomplished a Bildungsreise – a trip to increase the general education. The travel guides gave the cultural baggage to fully appreciate the Gotthard as the gateway to the extraordinary Italian culture. After the passage over the Gotthard, the travel guides promised the traveller to find balance in the soul. The guides’ authors contrasted northern and southern cultures, which on the one hand, served to present Ticino and Italy as the ultimate tourist destinations, but on the other hand to strengthen the differences in level of ‘civilisation’. Coming home after a trip to Italy over the Gotthard Mountains demonstrated that the people on the other side of the mountains were not like ‘us’ (German-speaking northerners): their food, landscape, women and children differed from ours. Described in such a way, travelling the Gotthard was also a confrontation with the self.



Travelling the Gotthard

The Gotthard railway as a Swiss experience In 2003, more than hundred years after the inauguration of the Gotthard Railway, Helmut Stalder, journalist for the Swiss newspaper Tagesanzeiger published a book about the Gotthard myth. His description of the journey on the Gotthard train bears striking resemblances to the descriptions in the late nineteenth-century travel guides. Stalder describes the myths of the heart of Switzerland, the helical tunnels near Wassen, the mail coach, the tunnel and the feeling while entering the southern cultural space. He describes the route as a typically Swiss outing for children on school excursions or classical family trips. Stalder illustrates that, in the twentieth century, the ‘Gotthard gaze’ – fixed in nineteenth-century practices and images – became a means to experience Swiss national identity. In this section, I will illustrate and explain the shift from travelling the Gotthard as a way to experience Switzerland to travelling the Gotthard as a typically Swiss experience. The ‘nationalisation’ of the Gotthard Railway experience had different aspects. At the turn of the century, major debates went on about a state-owned Swiss railway network. Proponents of nationalisation used nationalistic slogans, such as the ‘Swiss railways for the Swiss people’.430 The negotiations with Germany and Italy about the Gotthard Railway turned out more difficult than the Swiss government expected.431 Eventually in 1909, after debates inside and outside of Switzerland, the Swiss government bought the Gotthard Railway. It was the last railway line to be nationalised. The state-owned character of the Swiss railways influenced their appreciation as a national symbol. In 1938, Manfred Graze, in his doctoral thesis, accepted by the Polytechnische Hochschule für Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften of Nurnberg, concluded that the expansion of the railways had indirectly contributed to the development of a Swiss self-image. He argued that the railway network stimulated the unification of different races (Stämme) and religions into one united Switzerland, especially because of the Gotthard railway.432 In Europe, Switzerland presented itself as Europe’s hub because of international tourism and freight exchange. Graze argued – clearly influenced by German nationalism – that the Swiss railways functioned as a reinforcement of national unity. His thesis illustrated that the railways became a symbol for a united Swiss nation.433 The nationalisation of the railways made that the publicity surrounding the Gotthard line became more nationalist. After 1909, the Swiss Federal Railway took over the advertisement of railway lines in Switzerland. The number of new travel guides about the Gotthard line diminished, even though new publications appeared from time to time, for instance after

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the nationalisation of the Gotthard line and after its electrification.434 These booklets presented the same highlights and storylines of the earlier travel guides. Yet, the tone and style with which the Swiss Federal Railway promoted the Gotthard railway line differed significantly from earlier strategies, also because of major developments in the Swiss tourist industry. Train travel competed increasingly with car travel. Moreover, the start of the First World War caused a dramatic drop in foreign tourism.435 In reaction to these developments, the Federal Railway’s advertising targeted the Swiss population. Between 1900 and 1930, the amount of domestic tourism doubled.436 In the 1930s, the percentage of Swiss tourists in the city Lugano (Ticino) climbed to almost 50% of the total amount of tourists.437 In this period, the posters that lured people to the Gotthard changed focus. In the first decades after the Gotthard Railway’s opening, the posters emphasised the internationality of the Gotthard Railway, as a link between the north and Italy. In the 1920s and 30s, Swiss sites and icons dominated the posters. They depicted, for example, a bridge with a train, the church of Wassen or the tourist cities in Ticino. The title ‘Gotthard’ sufficed on these posters for advertising the Gotthard rail track. The addressed Swiss tourists needed no additional explanation. A complete description of the changes in promotional posters is beyond the goals of this chapter. To illustrate my point, I will give two examples of promotional posters of the Gotthard line. One is a turn-of-the-century poster, inspired by the Art Nouveau style, depicting a woman holding the northern European railway network in her hands, with the Italian lakes at her feet. She embodied the Gotthard Railway. The international aspects of the Gotthard Railway are highlighted both in the image and in the railway schedule. Until 1909, the posters of the Gotthard Railway emphasised that the railway line brought tourists from northern Europe to the sunny, Italian speaking south. In contrast, the posters published after the nationalisation of the line depict national sceneries. A clear example is the 1932 poster which captured a very nationalist image. It depicted black electric Gotthard locomotive with the Swiss flag at the front and cantonal flags alongside. With this poster the railway celebrated the Gotthard 50 Jahre, 50 years of Gotthard. Both posters advertised the Gotthard railway but in different decades and for different audiences. They also provoked different images, being so distinct in their colours, illustration and information. The latter image significantly depicts the Gotthard line as a symbol of national prowess. This type of imagery surrounding the Gotthard became more prominent in the 1930s and the 1940s.



Travelling the Gotthard

Two posters from the Gotthard Railway (1902 and 1932). Courtesy Poster collection Swiss National Library

The celebration of the Gotthard railway’s 50th jubilee exemplifies the nationalisation of the Gotthard trip. I use the festivities to illustrate the process of cultural nationalisation. Moreover, it links the conclusions presented in the previous chapters with the arguments in the next chapter. To celebrate the 50th anniversary, the Swiss Federal Railway used the image of Louis Favre as a national hero; it revisited the inauguration festivities in a nationalist atmosphere; it promoted travelling the Gotthard as the ultimate family trip to realise the Swiss pride and prowess of the Gotthard railway. The Swiss Federal Railway, that exploited the line since the nationalisation in 1909, organised a number of events for a broad audience to celebrate its fiftieth birthday. The city of Lucerne welcomed national and international guests with a banquet in the hotel ‘Schweizerhof ’ and the following day, special trains drove the guests over the Gotthard rails to the villages Göschenen and Airolo, at either side of the Gotthard Tunnel. The Swiss organisers invited representatives from both the German and Italian governments and the former labourers (mainly Italians). Despite the international touch, the events had a more Swiss character than the

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celebrations fifty years before. Heinrich Walther, member of the national Council and in the board of the Swiss federal railways, held a speech in which he called the Gotthard a monument of Swiss community spirit.438 In Airolo the bronze relief of the Swiss sculptor Vincenzo Vela Le vittime del lavoro was unveiled.439 The 380 veterans of the Gotthard railway construction marched towards the monument. They were followed by people in regional costumes, the local gymnastics club, the shooting club, the male choir of Airolo and finally the invited guests.440 The Swiss military, present with 30 men, opened and closed the parade of approximately 800 guests. The military took up positions flanking the monument and behind them stood the people in regional costumes. The local clubs swung their club flags. The nineteenth century and twentieth century celebrations show remarkable differences. In 1882, the city was decorated with the flags of the three countries involved; in 1932 the organisation committee prescribed beautification with the Swiss national colours: red and white. In 1882, the trains drove to the Italian city Milan; fifty years later the trains halted in Airolo.441 The Swiss Federal Railway, in addition to the official festivities for invited guests, also organised events for a broad Swiss audience. In its jubilee year, schools profited from reduced prices for outings to the Gotthard. Moreover, the Swiss Federal Railway distributed a special booklet about the past and present of Gotthard Railway to Swiss school children. The poem that accompanied the text described the views along the tracks and spoke of the rough Gotthard nature and the triumph of technology and labour.442 Swiss people could also enjoy a celebratory Gotthard journey, as part of the Gotthard Lichtwoche.443 Special night trains passed illuminated objects along the Gotthard tracks, of which the church of Wassen was the most famous. Because of its popularity, the Swiss Federal Railway decided to prolong the period.444 Under the title 50 years Gotthard the Swiss Federal Railway also published a travel brochure with trip from Basel by rail, ship and bus to the Gotthard. The Jubiläumsschrift zur Feier des fünfzigjährigen Betriebes der Gotthardbahn offered a history of the Gotthard Railway construction; it was translated into French and Italian. To complete the celebrations, Radio Bern broadcasted a radio play on May 27, 1932, written by Caesar von Arx, a famous Swiss playwright. The Swiss Federal Railway commissioned him to write this nationalistic play in which he presented the construction of the Gotthard Railway an important contribution of Switzerland out of its isolation into world history.445 The festivities around the Gotthard railway’s 50th anniversary indicate the popularity of the Gotthard railway and its role in Swiss history. The organisers took the jubilee as an occasion to celebrate the nation.



Travelling the Gotthard

This nationalist image resonated in Swiss society as becomes evident in a children’s book. In 1932, Ernst Eschman, a Swiss teacher and children’s book author, devoted a book to Swiss heroes. He added Louis Favre to his list as an example of how “simple men with authentic powers unfolded their inborn talents through entrepreneurship”.446 The part about Favre starts as a monologue of a father to his child, while they travel to Ticino in a train full of international tourists to see the ‘wonders’ at the other side of the Gotthard. “Do you know what kind of party we celebrate this year?” the father asks his son. He explains it has been fifty years that the Gotthard Tunnel construction ended, a date which plays an important role in international traffic. Just when the father finishes his story about Favre, the train rides out of the tunnel into the clear blue sky. Everybody in the train dares breathing again and starts rejoicing, according to the story. “All thanks to Louis Favre, a man of deeds and an example for every Swiss child.”447 International elements, abundantly present during the inaugural festivities of the line, were pushed to the margins; national sentiments dominated. The popular travel on the Gotthard railway in these years was rooted in the tourist gaze produced in the late nineteenth century. The travel guide writers offered ways to appreciate the line and the region as Swiss, which was followed by the juridical and cultural nationalisation of the railway. The gaze, which initially served the foreign tourist, fit the promotion of domestic tourism and the renewed search for a national identity in the tense interwar period. The process of cultural nationalisation of the Gotthard railway continued in the period after 1932. I argue that being able to visit the Gotthard region and absorb the standardised typically Swiss gaze influenced, and was influenced by, the construction of the Gotthard as a nationalised image in the interwar period – which will be the topic of the next chapter.

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Travelling the Gotthard

Chapter 4 Re-writing history

In 1936, Oskar Maurus Fontana, the well-known Austrian journalist, theatre critic and writer, published Der Weg durch den Berg, the path through the mountain.448 The novel tells the story of the Gotthard Tunnel construction in the form of a historical tale. Fontana explained that he stayed true to the historical facts but took the liberty to interpret them freely. The historical figures Louis Favre and Alfred Escher stood model for the central characters in the book. Fontana re-tells the history of the tunnel construction as a national deed. Protagonist Louis Favre is determined to construct the Gotthard Tunnel for the benefit of his country. He readily bears all responsibilities and risks to be able to conquer the Gotthard Mountain. In his battle, he met unexpected opposition from the local population and, as it seemed, from the Gotthard Mountain itself. However, while drilling the tunnel, Favre’s relation with the Gotthard Mountain changes. One day, Favre expresses his increasing doubts about his work underneath the mountains. He explains to his daughter: The Gotthard is not like chalk that transforms itself willingly or lets itself be changed. It is not plain building material that wants to please the landscape or the people. No, the Gotthard is more, it is primeval rock (Urgestein). But is stone not stone? Can stone be alive?449 The novel follows Favre’s quest in finding the answer to those questions. Technology, national identity and the Gotthard Mountain play key roles in the unfolding storyline. In this fictional history, the tunnel construction forms the décor against which the writer brings idealised Swiss and universal values to the fore. Fontana’s work of fiction is just one example of multiple novels that were published on the Gotthard before, during and shortly after the Second World War. In this period, the Gotthard inspired many novelists and playwrights outside and inside Switzerland. Two radio plays450, two stage plays451 and six novels452 appeared that all touched upon the themes of collective identity, Gotthard Mountains and technological change. Most of this Gotthard fictional literature falls under the

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heading of ‘light reading’ and fits the German category Unterhaltungsromane453 or Heimatliteratur.454 This light fictional genre was popular among the Swiss. In later years, however, most of these ‘Gotthard’ novels sank into oblivion.455 The narratives cannot be categorised as high ‘literature’ and the nationalistic tones soon became out-dated. Still, this body of forgotten literature offers a rich glance into how novelists re-wrote the history of the tunnel for a broad public.

Literature as a lens for studying technology and culture456 There is a growing literature in the fields of both the history of technology and technology studies which uses novels and movies as valuable sources.457 Instead of using fiction to garnish merely the description of social or historical events, fiction is increasingly analysed as a primary source. The classical distinction between high-culture and low culture usually disappears in these studies. Science fiction action movies, for example, are just as important sources as philosophical novels. Both sources convey an appreciation of societal developments and technological change.458 The richness of the source derives from its flexibility as an art form. Writers try to capture sentiments and reactions to major changes in society as well to offer a language in which to discuss these changes. In contrast to many other non-artistic forms of expression, fiction can play out tensions and ambiguities, without necessarily solving them.459 Novelists have the freedom to offer alternative interpretations to developments, partially because they can create fictional worlds. Fontana made this explicit in his novel. He respected the historical storyline of the Gotthard Tunnel construction and used it as a backbone to sketch and ‘unveil’ his characters’ lines of thought. Moreover, in fiction, writers can give things a voice. For example, much of the Gotthard fiction portrays the Gotthard Mountain(s) as alive and able to speak. Hence, fiction allows writers to express sentiments that might otherwise be harder to bring to the surface. Moreover, novels can offer an understandable language to help people articulate their anxieties, fear or enthusiasm about technological changes. They can also become agents in societal change. Important themes in a certain culture often stem from a long literary and intellectual tradition. Modifying or altering these themes help bridge existing traditions with new ones that develop with the dawning of a technological culture.460



Re-writing history

It is this mutuality of ‘shaping’ and ‘being shaped by’ that makes it even more interesting to study the Gotthard fictional novels as agents in appropriating the Gotthard Tunnel into the national Swiss imagery. Studying recurring themes in stories can illuminate issues of collective identity. Novels can also be seen as a form to help express or construct a sense of collective belonging. In their narratives, technology can become such a theme for expressing national identity. Moreover, novels are sources to understand the appropriation of technology, especially in the nineteenth century. However, the publication of the Gotthard novels cannot directly be related to the tunnel construction period, since they were published more than 50 years after the official opening. Something else must have triggered the sudden interest of novelists in the Gotthard Tunnel. Understanding this requires a short contextual sketch.

Switzerland’s withdrawal to Heimat and Gotthard The period when the Gotthard became a popular theme in literature can be characterised as one in which Switzerland withdrew to a cultural island.461 Swiss inhabitants felt threatened by the increasing tensions inside and outside the country. During the First World War and the interwar period, the existing social and political balances in Switzerland were upset, which exposed the underlying tensions present in Swiss society. On the one hand, the technological and economic modernisation had transformed Swiss society, on the other hand, the bourgeoisie guarded more traditional values. Moreover, Switzerland had internationalised politically and economically, whereas Swiss cultural values remained largely provincial. These ‘unparallel developments’ in Swiss society created anxieties among the population.462 The polarisation in Europe during these years segregated the Swiss society along language borders and the gap between the different language cultures in Switzerland widened.463 During the First World War, the German-speaking regions of Switzerland developed, in general, sympathy for the German viewpoint, whereas the Italian and French speaking Swiss tended to identify with the Entente States.464 Moreover, the well-contained tensions between the working class and the politically powerful bourgeoisie exploded. The national strike in November 1918 signalled the deepened the gap between labourers and the bourgeoisie. Increasing pressure on wages combined with growing unemployment aggravated the Swiss situation.

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Externally, Switzerland needed to re-position itself in a warring Europe. The rise of totalitarian ideologies and states influenced Swiss political and cultural life heavily. Historians characterise Swiss politics between 1914 and 1945 as a series of attempts to ‘adapt’ the Swiss political and economic situation to the new political powers in Europe. Swiss politicians perceived the spread of Communism as a major threat for the internal stability in Switzerland because communism exacerbated the tensions between workers and bourgeoisie. They also developed a policy of appeasement towards Fascist Italy and created an unclear political attitude toward Nazi-Germany. Although the open criticism of the Swiss national government towards the Nazi regime slowly grew, economically the relationship with Nazi-Germany intensified rather than diminished. Some Swiss politicians and Swiss people sympathised with the values and aims of Germany, while at the same time, Swiss nationalism ran high.465 For the Swiss population, the Swiss government translated the ambivalent political agenda into a straightforward focus on Swiss national identity and its uniqueness in the world: the Swiss independence from its totalitarian neighbouring countries and Swiss neutrality characterised the true Swiss character. Foreign aggressors jeopardised these Swiss values and the government called upon the population to defend these values. The Swiss state accentuated the external threat to ease social polarisation. The atmosphere of nationalism appealed to other sensitivities in Swiss culture, such as xenophobia, fascism, feelings of superiority and cultural provincialism. A strongly nationalist discourse dominated Swiss culture on the eve of the Second World War.466 Historians describe the general context as inward looking, narrow-minded and provincial.467 This stimulated the slumbering Swiss patriotism, which the Swiss government nurtured.468 From the early 1930s, intellectuals ascribed this cultural withdrawal as geistige Landesverteidigung, spiritual defence.469 It affected Swiss culture and literature greatly.470 Central themes in the definition of Swissness were: freedom, the ability to defend itself, Christianity, multi-lingual culture, social solidarity, love for the Fatherland, work ethics, smallness, neutrality and humanity.471 This spiritual defence dominated cultural government policy which meant a direct intervention of the state in national culture.472 By formalising and stimulating Swiss national identity, the Swiss government explicitly asked for the voluntary help of teachers, artists and novelists to diffuse these ideas to the Swiss population. Many responded to this plea. The geistige Landesverteidigung found broad resonance among the Swiss population.473



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Gotthard as a focal point In the 1930s and 40s, writers, philosophers and politicians mobilised the Gotthard image at crucial moments to express a sense of Swiss national identity. The examples below give a sense of the intensity given to the Gotthard image. Inspiration for the Gotthard image came from patriotic literature of writers such as Gonzague de Reynold, Max Liehburg and Georg Thürer.474 In earlier periods, naturalists presented the Gotthard as a central place in Switzerland and as the symbolic core of Switzerland as well as Europe. The Gotthard image already encompassed a rich set of references that now merged into one powerful image. The Gotthard image received a prominent place at the entrance of the Swiss national exhibition, which took place from May until October 1939 in the city of Zurich.475 According to both contemporaries and historians, the national exhibition captured the emotions surrounding the Swiss self-image in these months preceding the Second World War.476 More than ten million people passed the gate to visit the exhibition. This is a striking number since the Swiss population counted only 4,205,600 people. Tradition, history and national defence formed the central themes. No national exhibition had been as nationalist and unambiguous.477 The success of the exhibition illustrates that the chosen themes resonated among the Swiss people.478 At the entrance of the exhibition, the organisers placed a large map of the Gotthard. The map represented the Gotthard Mountains in the heart of the Alpine chain and in the middle of Europe, marked by a red star. Four rivers originated from the centre, running in four directions towards the Swiss borders: the Reuss flowing to the north; the Rhine to the East; the Ticino southwards; and the Rhone westward. The text on the image read Helvetia Mater Fluviorum, Switzerland mother of rivers. Switzerland became the mother of the major European rivers and the Gotthard formed their origin. The text explained: Gotthard: “The focus of our country – symbol of our history and geographical position”.479 In the same period, the conservative-catholic Federal Council Member Philipp Etter held a number of programmatic public speeches characteristic of the spiritual defence.480 The Gotthard recurred in Etter’s speeches, in which he aimed to bridge the political and social differences in Switzerland by creating a common image.481 The Gotthard image symbolically supported his ideas. Etter inspired several influential Swiss thinkers to found an organisation to guard and strengthen Swiss national values. They called the association the Gotthardbund because the Gotthard encapsulated the core of what its founders deemed Swiss values. 482

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The chosen military strategy reinforced and literally ‘fortified’ the imagery of the Gotthard, as an icon of Swissness. Switzerland increasingly feared war on its own territory in the 1930s. This forced the Swiss military to rethink the national defence system. The central point of defence became the Alpine chain because the Alps, as the military argued, provided Switzerland with a natural ally in the event the country should come under attack. The government and military official made the Swiss population believe that this réduit national formed an unconquerable barrier of ‘stone and ice’, which they expanded with bunkers for thousands of soldiers and citizens. The military reasoned that as long as the Swiss controlled the Alps, it could function as a base of operation to win back the rest of the country.483 Important was the perceived task of Switzerland to protect the European passes (Hüterin der Alpenpässe).484 Geographical and military elements formed the central building blocks of the Gotthard image. The spiritual defence and the military defence merged. A former member of the Swiss General Staff explained: The Gotthard bulwark reflects the notion held by the entire Swiss people, that the Alps are the natural and divine fortress, into which the army and the people would retreat and which they would defend with their utmost.485 Georg Thürer, a well-known Swiss writer, explained the Gotthard’s past as a passageway and drew lessons from it for Switzerland’s present and future.486 In 1943, he published a programmatic article in the national newspaper the Neue Zürcher Zeitung that later became published by Heer und Haus, a publishing house that explicitly facilitated the spread of spiritual defence literature.487 Direct cause for writing the article was, according to Thürer himself, the increasing uncertainty about the direction the war in Europe would take. Thürer proposed to seek guidance and anchor points in Swiss history because ex alpibus salus patriae.488 The Gotthard should function as signpost, a Wegweiser. He presented the Gotthard as a symbol that could offer the Swiss people clues on how to stand strong in times of war and crises. He turned to the Gotthard because it was the “Swiss mountain of fate, at whose feet the Swiss confederation was born and which proves itself strong by closely guarding its gates”.489 What followed was a concise history of the Gotthard as a passage point. Thürer included the role of technology in the full body of associations of the Gotthard. The opening of the passage road over the Gotthard meant to Switzerland what the Nile had meant for Egypt: both a lifeline and a native ground. Thürer calls the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century technological improvements of the pass the ‘pacemaker for global peace’ (Schrittmacherin des Weltfriedens). In line



Re-writing history

with progress, he presented the construction of the Gotthard Railway as the glorious precision work of Swiss technology: it was the ‘iron will’ of Louis Favre that finally overcame the human and natural obstacles to unite cultures. “(…) What a wonderful symbol! A French-speaking Swiss who creates a path between German Switzerland and the Italian canton Ticino.”490 According to Thürer, the Gotthard symbolised Switzerland’s goal, namely to maintain its neutrality and guard the Gotthard as the ultimate embodiment of it. Switzerland would thus impress Europe, Thürer predicted, and remind the European people that they are part of a brotherhood. Thus, he made clear that the Swiss national defence played an international role as an example to Europe. Switzerland represented a small island in a belligerent Europe and an exemplary ‘microcosm’ of peaceful cohabitation of cultures.491 Despite its decline in the early decades of the twentieth century, Heimat literature regained popularity during the spiritual defence. At the turn of the century, writers of Heimat novels proposed a counter environment to the negative effects of modernisation. Experimental art by foreign intellectuals led some writers to argue that art had lost its valuable link with the people and the Heimat.492 In contrast to what they saw as incomprehensible elitist art, Heimat novelists wanted to reach a broad public with easy-to-read literature that could cross the bridge between the artist and his or her public.493 The new wave of traditional Heimat-culture expressed a need to invigorate a Volks (common) theatre and literature. In general, plots developed chronologically and storylines remained straightforward. Moreover, the books were usually full of suspense and humour which contributed to their readability.494 In the Heimat novels, the Alps developed into an ideal refuge from modern city life. As an alternative to the increasingly ‘unhealthy’ world in which people lived, these novels created a fictional context in mountainous nature. They appealed to ‘Swiss’ national values and morality, inscribed in the Alpine landscape. The landscape radiated peacefulness and guarded the values of patriarchal bourgeois families. Furthermore, protagonists fought classical heroic battles against archaic mythical nature. During the interbellum, the Gotthard proved to be the ultimate theme to turn to: it fit seamlessly with the Alpine mystification and played an iconic role in Swiss popular propaganda. In studies on the Gotthard symbolism during the years of the spiritual defence, the role of technology is largely absent. However, novelists explicitly used the Gotthard as a technological project to develop their narratives, because it connected nationalist sentiments to the role Switzerland claimed to play

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in Europe. Switzerland wanted to serve as a perfect, peaceful example of federalism, thanks to her guardianship of Gotthard.495

The Gotthard as homeland The body of ‘Gotthard literature’ touches upon three historical periods: the construction of the Gotthard Pass in the 13th century; the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel in the 19th century; and the Gotthard Railway during operation. All narratives address the question of how the locals of Gotthard Mountains dealt with the opening up of ‘their’ Gotthard region. In the stories, residents need to balance their lives anew because of the changes in both their material and mental landscape. This leads unavoidably to tensions and a redefinition of personal and collective identities. Thus, the literature discusses a perspective that does not surface in other sources, namely the view of the people directly affected by the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel. This chapter focuses on four different novels that explicitly deal with the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel. Swiss authors wrote two of them, a German and an Austrian novelist wrote the others. Interestingly, the theme of the Gotthard influenced writers outside of Switzerland. These writers construct relatively similar storylines as the Swiss authors. I do not intend to discuss all storylines in the novels; the emphasis will be on the relation they construct between the Gotthard as a space, as a technological project and as identity. I will first discuss the two Swiss books, then the foreign novels. In 1940, Rudolf Schnetzer (1899-1984), editor and baker, published Schicksal am Gotthard, fate at the Gotthard.496 It became one of his most successful novels and was reprinted four times that year. Also in 1940, the French-speaking Swiss journalist and writer Jacques-Edouard Chable (1903-1965) issued Le Saint Gothard.497 An ‘adapted’ German translation appeared almost directly after the French version.498 The novels focus on the planning and construction of the Gotthard Tunnel. The main characters in both novels are local men from the Gotthard region, who start working in the tunnel. The narratives follow the characters and offer glimpses at how they perceive life on the Gotthard Pass and in the tunnel. Even though both characters see the Gotthard as their Heimat, their homeland, their appreciation of the Gotthard differs strongly.



Re-writing history

Gotthard as Heimat The main character in Schnetzer’s novel is Brosi (Ambrosi Gamma). He is a young, poor and simple (einfach) man from Andermatt, a village on the Gotthard Pass. His father maintains the road over the Gotthard, but barely earns enough to support his wife and their children. As the family’s eldest son, Brosi works at the tunnel to support his family. The novel roughly tells his story in three parts, which allow the reader to acquaint himself with the work in tunnel and life on the pass. The first part of the novel sketches Brosi’s relationship with the work in the tunnel. The work obsesses Brosi completely. When his friend and colleague dies in a tunnel accident, Brosi vows revenge to the mountain which he holds responsible for his friend’s death. He swears to conquer the mountain and drive the tunnel through. A second reason for his growing obsession with the work is the impossibility of his love for Seph. Seph is a young woman from the nearby village Hospenthal, whose father arranged her marriage with the local coachman, Fidel Christen, because he wants to prevent his daughter from marrying Brosi. Seph’s father does not want his daughter to marry someone who continuously risks his life in the tunnel. Jealous and frustrated, Brosi devotes himself entirely to tunnelling, working his way up and obtaining a high-status task on the drilling machines at the forefront. He soon enjoys the protection of his employer, Louis Favre. Life on the pass continues and when Seph gets pregnant, she finally forgets her love for Brosi and devotes herself to her husband and her future family life. In the second part of the novel, Brosi’s relationship with the work changes. He realises that he cooperates on a project that is devastating the economy of the villages along the Gotthard Pass. His absence from home and family makes him realise how much he loves his Heimat, the region where he has grown up. He has trouble finding where his loyalties lie and slowly becomes alienated from both worlds. Symbolically and literally the tunnel work marks him for life. He burns part of his face while trying to save design drawings for new drills from a blazing fire in Ferroux’s workshop. Fidel’s death forms the dramatic turning point in the novel. Fidel Christen dies following an accident on the pass during a snowstorm. He leaves his pregnant wife behind. Soon afterwards, she gives birth to a son whom she names after his father. Seph’s father then realises that marrying his daughter off to a mail coachman did not prevent her from misfortune. Brosi seizes the opportunity to win back Seph’s love. Both Seph and Brosi carry a burden. However, in contrast to Brosi, Seph has found peace with her fate. Brosi still struggles with his loyalties and has difficulty accepting that his love for Seph would include accepting the child of his former adversary.

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In the final part of the novel, Brosi celebrates the breakthrough of the tunnel. By drilling the tunnel he avenged his friend’s death and can return home with a clear conscience. He is now better able to accept Seph’s child as he realises that it embodies the future of the region. The former lovers finally can be together. Moreover, Brosi gets a job at the new railways as soon as it is operational. He combines his work for the railways with his life on the pass. Brosi’s personal fate is settled and new economic possibilities breathe life into the region on the pass. People find employment in tourism and the silk industry. As a result, Brosi’s family does not depend on his income anymore. This releases him from the duty to support his own family and he can start a family of his own by marrying Seph. All ends happily. The novel’s straightforward and uncomplicated storyline creates a sharp opposition between the traditional life on the pass and the modernity heralded by the tunnel. The novel opens with the description of a grey and silent autumn landscape near the construction site of Göschenen. The serenity and greyness contrasts with the next scene in which Schnetzer presents the protagonist, Brosi, during his work in the tunnel. Here rule noise, movement and darkness.499 These two representations of the ‘Gotthard’ above the pass and underneath the mountains recur throughout the novel. Brosi encounters the Gotthard Mountain through the construction work in the tunnel. In these descriptions the mountain is capricious and temperamental; it kills workers and hampers the work. In the novel it is often unclear what wields power. Is it the work itself or the mountain that bewitches the workers?500 Local people on the pass blame the ‘dark powers of the mountain’ for Brosi’s increasing work obsession. Trying to save the drawings for the newest drilling machines from the fire illustrates how reckless his determination to finish the tunnel has become. The work in the bowels of the mountain influences the workers and brings out the best and worst in the men. Moreover, the Gotthard represents the economic lifeline of the villagers above the pass, such as Brosi’s father and Fidel Christen. The people of the region perceive the pass as the decisive element of their life and fate.501 For them, the pass is like a living being which can be loved, hated, mourned for and as such it can also die. The tunnel construction killed the pass, depriving the locals, who depended on it, of their identity. Brosi embodies both ‘Gotthards’. The love for his region and his loyalty to Favre’s work tear him apart. Full of doubt, he explains to a co-worker: “And the valley, my Heimat, I never realised that it meant so much to me. You know how I love the



Re-writing history

project for which we work, and still sometimes I suddenly hate it.”502 Both emotionally and physically, he vacillates between the pass and the tunnel. He tries to go home as often as possible but he always returns to his work when Favre needs him. His work in the tunnel and his love for the pass isolate him from both social worlds: his old friends in the village despise him because of his work in the tunnel; and his co-workers in the tunnel do not understand his love for the Gotthard region. The novel eventually synthesises the opposing two worlds. The final synthesis between the pass and the tunnel occurs through the construction of parallels. The development of the plot makes the characters recognise that there are more similarities than differences between the pass and the tunnel. In Schnetzer’s novel labour plays a crucial role to bridge these differences. Repeatedly, the tunnel workers refer to a sense of manliness.503 The vehement fight against the mountain awakes the man in the workers. The characters in the book appreciate masculinity achieved through labour as a crucial characteristic for an adult male.504 For example, after having severe doubts about the tunnel construction, Brosi’s father welcomes his son back after the tunnel breakthrough. He proudly concludes that the work has turned his son into a ‘real man’. The father realises that Brosi has achieved manhood in the same manner as he would have through traditional work on the pass. Loyalty to work plays a central role as well. Brosi explains his loyalty to Favre as a typical feature of mountain people in contrast to the ‘other’, Italian workers. “I am from this region, and we mountain people are of a different kind than most people who work here in Göschenen today.” According to Brosi, mountain people have a sense of duty and to the general good above their individual interest. They have developed this character because for ages they have had the responsibility to safely carry across passengers and mail across the pass. Labour in the tunnel evokes the same sense of loyalty that Brosi would have had working on the pass. The labour in the tunnel becomes a metaphor for life in general. By working his way through the mountain, Brosi conquers both the mountain and himself. At the end of the novel, Brosi sighs: “The tunnel is like life, one has to tunnel through both of them”.505 To reach manhood Brosi had to experience hardship, pain and misery while fighting against the mountain and for his life. This finally enables him to marry Seph with her child. Labour bridges the dichotomies and dissolves the tensions between modernity (the tunnel) and traditionalism (the pass). By creating parallels, the transition from a traditional community into a modern community can take place without

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losing the region’s identity. The characters find a balance between the traditional values of the community of the pass and modernity brought by the tunnel. Brosi is eventually capable of loving Seph’s child because he sees the child as the incorporation of the past and the future. Fidel, as a coachman, embodied the old pass. He died and with his death he made the reconciliation between Seph and Brosi possible. Brosi accepts Fidel’s child, because it embodies both worlds and thus the fate of the Gotthard region, Schicksal am Gotthard.

Gotthard as a mystic home Chable’s Le Saint Gothard is less virtuous than Schnetzer’s novel. In 1940, it was published and immediately translated to German as Sankt Gotthard.506 I take both the French and German novel as a point of departure. In the German translation, the subtitle characterises the novel as a: ‘Swiss tale about labour and adventure’. The backflap explains: “We see a people working on one of the most adventurous, arduous of all works that demanded so many lives.”507 It advertises the novel as an example showing how the separation of races is overcome by the peaceful cooperation of German and French-speaking workers. According to the back flap, the novel puts Louis Favre on a pedestal. The publisher advertised the German translation to meet the tastes of German-speaking Swiss readers. As will become clear, the German translation defied many of the publisher’s claims. The translator adapted the novel substantially and left out certain passages, especially where the original French text is violent and has a sexual slant. The reader remains largely uninformed about the personal background of the main character Sebastien (Sebastiano Righini). He comes from the Italian-speaking canton Ticino and lives in the Gotthard Mountains as a bon vivant and anarchist. He acts manipulatively, superstitiously, opportunistically and unreliably. His life style defies the authority of the church, the laws of the country and the logic of science and technology. He has no fixed place to live which enhances his intangibility as a character and connects him strongly to the mountain environment. The local people fear him as a sorcerer and bearer of the evil eye. Sebastien earns his money as a Strahler, a Swiss-German word for someone searching and selling precious stones. For his work, he scrutinises every rock on the Gotthard. In reality, this is merely an excuse to search for gold.508 From his childhood, he heard rumours that gold lies buried inside the mountain. It obsesses him and he is determined to find it. The construction of the Gotthard Tunnel threatens profoundly Sebastien’s existence because he is convinced that digging the tunnel is just a gold search. This renders the tunnelling enterprise a direct competitor. Therefore, he distrusts and



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despises the people of the Gotthard Railway Company. Peter Ab Ibegg, a representative of this company, becomes the target of Sebastien’s antagonism. Peter – the novel always refers to him by his full name – is a refined and academicallyeducated geologist from Zurich, who is sent to the Gotthard to gather information for the planning of the tunnel. Peter advocates the tunnel as a triumph of science and technology. While studying the Gotthard, he enters the domain of Sebastien. Moreover, Peter makes advances on Ursula, a local farmer’s daughter whom Sebastien is courting. One day, in blind jealousy and rage, Sebastien tries to kill Peter. The murder attempt forces Sebastien to leave the region. He flees to the Frenchspeaking part of Switzerland and seeks work as a brick-layer. Here, he also comes into conflict with the law. Homesick, Sebastien returns to the Gotthard anonymously. He finds work in the tunnel which offers him the opportunity to return to the Gotthard and avoid being charged for murder. His life’s mission does not change by enrolling himself to the hated tunnel work: he still wants to find gold, this time from inside. Obsessed by this search, he takes many risks and becomes more violent. He even betrays his friends to acquire the ancient secret of how to find gold. He learns that the glow of burning human fat reveals it. This knowledge drives him insane and he crosses all ethical boundaries to achieve his goal. One day, alone in the mountain, he manages to burn a candle with the required human fat. He sees the gold shining just in front of him, but the mountain walls enclose on him and burry him with the secret of the gold. Soon after Sebastien’s death the breakthrough of the tunnel is celebrated. The novel juxtaposes two views on the Gotthard, one embodied in the character of Sebastien and the other in Peter. Sebastien stands for a romantic worldview; Peter defends enlightenment rationalist ideals. Sebastien knows the Gotthard through years of experience by smell, form, taste and colour. Peter regards the Gotthard as an object of study, which can be measured, calculated and mapped. Peter does not understand the opposition of the local population and scoffs at their attitude. “You will see that soon, opposition will cease, and intellect and science will triumph over ignorance.”509 Ursula’s doubts also illustrate their differences: Sebastien’s masculinity and body attract her; Peter’s knowledge and elegance intrigue her. Chable sketches Peter’s character straightforwardly, but explicates Sebastien’s view on the Gotthard in its full complexity and ambivalence. In Sebastien’s eyes, the Gotthard lives as something bigger than himself.510 To Sebastien the Gotthard exists as a Saint511, a meeting point512, a hospice, a route, a pass, a living being – giant, monster, human and woman – 513, a landscape, a

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watershed, and a place to find stones and gold. The intimate relation that Sebastien developed with the Gotthard while living on the mountain deepens during the work in the tunnel. He describes the boring as if he is penetrating a living being, determined to worm out its secret (the gold).514 In Chable’s novel there is no reconciliation between Peter’s modernist ideals and Sebastien’s romantic ones. Sebastien clings to traditional worldviews, but modernity outruns him. Ursula is left empty handed at the conclusion: Peter left after his work was done and Sebastien died because he loved gold more than her. The characters hardly develop and they hold on to fixed ideas and positions. Sebastien continues his search for gold; Peter remains stubborn and arrogant in defending the need of science, technology and progress; and Ursula cannot rationalise her self-destructive love for Sebastien. In this novel, the Gotthard’s mystique and secrets die with Sebastien and give way to the rationality and arrogance of modernity. The novels of Chable and Schnetzer differ strongly, yet they contain interesting similarities. In the first place, both novels sketch diverging worlds in the tunnel and on the pass. The tunnel represents modernity, obsession, enclosed space and isolation. The world on the pass represents tradition, purity, freedom and traditional values. Both protagonists experience the tunnel as a threat to the values of identity and economic survival. At the same time, however, the work in the tunnel exerts a powerful attraction to both central characters. They physically connect these two worlds and thereby experience the similarities between them. Sebastien denies both the traditional values of the community on the pass as well as the values of modernity the tunnel people convey. For him, the close relationship with the mountain intensifies because he finds mystic qualities both in the mountains and above. Brosi connects the two worlds by reaching manhood through his labour. Both novels clearly refer to the sense of belonging. Sebastien and Brosi go back ‘home’ to the Gotthard Mountains which plays an important role in the identity of both men. After his exile, Sebastien returns homesick to the Gotthard Mountains and Brosi to his family in Andermatt on the pass. ‘Home’ is defined differently by the protagonists, but the will to return and intensify the relation is equally strong. Schnetzer’s novel fits in with the typical Heimat literature of the 1930s and 40s. It embraces the morality of family values, the work ethic and the idealisation of alpine people. It is difficult to place Chable’s novel in the same category. Sebastien incorporates many ‘undesired’ characteristics and meets the cliché image of the outsider: Italian speaking, non-conformist, unreliable, immoral. Still, the novel



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offers a very rich image of the Gotthard and the many meanings it encompasses. This romantic description of the Gotthard is reduced to its economic function in Schnetzer’s novel. Interestingly, the German translation of Chable’s novel tries to transform it to the alleged taste of the German-speaking audience. The expurgated German version of the novel attempts to sell the book to the German-speaking audience that apparently preferred themes such as ‘Gotthard’, ‘Favre’, and ‘unification of cultures through labour’. Not surprisingly, these themes are central to Schnetzer’s Heimat novel as they circulated as central Swiss tropes in the years of spiritual defence.

Projecting Heimat onto the Gotthard The Gotthard theme did not only inspire Swiss writers. The Austrian writer Oskar Maurus Fontana (1889-1969) and the German Paul Bühler (1903-1966) saw the Swiss construction of the Gotthard Tunnel as an historical setting upon which to project their focal themes: ‘freedom of the mind’ and ‘brotherhood’. Fontana published his novel in 1936. In the autumn and winter of 1941, the German writer Paul Bühler wrote Der Gotthard Tunnel. Die Tragödi Louis Favre. Drama in sechs Bildern, the Gotthard Tunnel. The tragedy of Louis Favre, a play in six scenes. Bühler published his play in St. Gallen, Switzerland.515 During the Second World War, he wrote multiple dramas that dealt with people’s problems in times of war. Given the wartime context of the publications, it is tempting to see these works as a criticism of the war and the loss of values in respectively Austrian and German society. To conclude this would require a thorough analysis of their complete oeuvre and the novelists’ background; this would exceed the limits of this chapter. In Bühler’s play, anti-Italian and anti-German sentiments can be identified. From 1935, Fontana’s works stood on the number one list of ‘harmful and undesirable literature’ of the Austrian government. His contested position within Austria might have led him to choose a historical setting in Switzerland to express his ideas.516 However, central to this chapter is how the novels’ storyline and their messages function. Both authors re-write the Gotthard history, well-aware of the cultural tendencies and favourite themes in Swiss society. The authors employed a Swiss background to criticise larger issues in European society.

Drilling for freedom Paul Bühler embroiders on the themes of the defence of freedom and the independent mind. The playwright chose the life of Favre to illustrate this theme. The

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narrative starts in 1878, when the tunnel construction is endangered by the financial crisis of the Gotthard Railway Company. The German and Italian representatives of the Gotthard Railway Company decide to saddle Favre’s tunnelling company with the financial burdens. It is clear from the text that the Italians and Germans have no heart for the work; they only care about prestige and profits the tunnel will yield. Louis Favre is not interested in their politics; his sole aim is to build an international Swiss pathway. The political foul play, however, forces Favre to compromise. The representatives threaten to replace him if he does not comply with their new strict regulations. They force him into a corner because they make him choose between giving up his freedom or his life work. Favre is unable to abandon his beloved project or to become a servant under another ruler. He agrees to the new rules although he knows they protect the interests of the international stakeholders and harm the greater cause of constructing the tunnel. The new rules will ruin Favre personally and slow the work. He is not able to bear this loss of his freedom; he eventually dies of a heart attack in the tunnel. The dialogues between Favre and a local dairy farmer from the Gotthard are crucial for the reader’s understanding of freedom. The old farmer, a strong opponent of the Gotthard Tunnel, explains his fear to Favre. By listening to the farmer’s reasoning, Favre tries to understand his position. According to the farmer, the tunnel construction violates the peacefulness of the Gotthard landscape and its construction robs the local people of their identity. The farmer sees the tunnel as the ultimate evil of modernism: it forces the Gotthard region to fuse with technology (Technik), international traffic (Völkerverkehr) and world economy (Weltwirtschaft).517 The farmer preaches humility to God and prophesizes the arrival of Saint Mikael, who will come to pass judgment over Favre’s work, in 1879.518 In his aversion to the Gotthard Tunnel, the farmer distances himself physically from the tunnel by climbing higher up the Gotthard Mountain with his cows. This also widens the gap between him and his son, Thöny. Thöny admires modernity brought to the Gotthard region by Favre’s tunnel. He works in the Gotthard Tunnel and fully commits himself to its construction. He believes that “The one who crept through this night has accomplished something.”519 His father regards Thöny’s tunnel work as a betrayal of his roots. According to his father Thöny is ‘caught by the darkness’ and has become blind to the secrets of the Gotthard Mountains.520 Therefore, he questions whether Thöny will ever be able to return to a life above the Gotthard because the two lives are irreconcilable. The farmer thinks that the unrest of the tunnel work and the life in Göschenen contrast too sharply with the peacefulness of the Gotthard landscape and the values of its community. Favre tries to reconcile the farmer with his son.



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To bring father and son together, Favre dissolves the contrasts between the traditional life on the pass and the work in the tunnel. He explains that the symbolism of the Gotthard Mountains equals the symbolic deed of the tunnel construction. He explains to the father that Thöny is a good worker and that he is tough (zäh). Favre argues that a father should be proud to have a son like him, since he participates in a grand project to connect darkness and light. Favre explains that the construction work is an expression of the most honourable possession of those workers in the tunnel: freedom. Giving up the work would mean to sacrifice this freedom. This, according to Favre, would cause the Gotthard to collapse. Moreover, Favre explains that the tunnel has to be built. Switzerland simply cannot close itself off. A tunnel will bring economic prosperity and, more importantly, Menschlichkeit und Kultur des Geistes.521 In 1879, the controversies between father, son and Favre dissolve when Favre dies in the tunnel. Before his death, Favre witnesses screams of the Gotthard and he realises that the Gotthard is alive, as the farmer had told him. In these last moments, the Mountain values Favre’s faith and fight for freedom, by appreciating the tunnel as the outcome of enlightenment, truth and righteousness. After this revelation, Favre falls to the ground and sees Saint Mikael, whose arrival the farmer had prophesied. Favre sees it as the final proof that God supports the construction of the tunnel. The farmer observes the scene of Favre’s death and the arrival of the saint. In contrast to his prophesy, the angel does not doom Favre. Hence, the farmer concludes that Favre’s fight and victory must have been God’s will.522 In the eyes of the farmer, God sent Saint Mikael as a proof that Favre actually built a bridge between the darkness of the tunnel and God’s light above the pass. “Am Gotthard steht ein Wächter” concludes one of the other characters upon Favre’s death.523 Favre becomes the guardian of the Gotthard Tunnel and thereby a symbolic guardian of freedom. For the décor during the theatre performance, Bühler suggested projecting the portrait of Favre on the tunnel portal in the last scene. In this drama, the protagonist Favre sacrifices his individual freedom to protect and save the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel. He becomes the guardian of both the values of life on the pass and modernist tunnel values. The novelist creates parallels between these values by emphasising love, dedication to freedom and following one’s divine mission. The reconciliation between the farmer and his son is possible through this synthesis. It is clear that the representatives of the Gotthard Railway Company have nothing to do with these sentiments. This makes the higher stakes in the Gotthard Tunnel construction a predominantly Swiss affair. The closing scene refers directly to the acclaimed role of Switzerland as the main guardian of European passes and values.524 The word choice is literally that

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of the Swiss spiritual defence, yet used in this novel to call attention to universal themes.

Favre’s combat with the Gotthard Oskar Maurus Fontana’s novel Der Weg durch den Berg presents the fictional lives of Louis Favre and Alfred Escher in parallel even though they become alienated from each other. Both men sense their mission to build the Gotthard Railway and Tunnel. Their quest isolates them from their families, the Swiss people (Escher) and the Gotthard Railway Company (Favre). Their obsessive dedication ruins Favre financially and Escher politically. However, it brings them closer to the work at the Gotthard. Eventually, Louis Favre dies in the tunnel; Alfred Escher steps down as the president of the Gotthard Railway Company. The novel ends with the reconciliation of the two unfortunate figure heads of the Gotthard Tunnel construction. From the start of the novel, the tunnel construction is defined as a Swiss affair. Character development and plot strengthen its Swissness further. The novel portrays Favre and Escher as Swiss citizens who work for the Swiss cause which becomes clear in the scene in which they sign the agreement to build the tunnel. Here, Escher reveals why he chose Favre as the tunnel entrepreneur. Escher stood still and glanced at the treaty. Then he pointed at the three signatures. ‘You see, Favre, now I can tell you the secret reason why I chose you. (…) Look, the signature in the right corner. You read Schweizer. This is the name of my secretary. But that is what we all are Schweizer: Swiss. I wanted Switzerland to strive for the Gotthard and to realise it. I persisted and I am content.525 In the novel, Escher focuses all his attention on organisational issues. He stays behind his desk in the city of Zurich to deal with the bureaucratic and diplomatic aspects of the construction. Despite all his well-intended efforts, the Swiss public blames him for the financial debacle. Escher feels misunderstood by his own people when they force him to resign. He does not develop a relationship to the Gotthard as a mountain. His remoteness from the physical work also distances him from Favre. In contrast to Escher, Favre dislikes official procedures. He fully engages himself in the practicalities of the tunnel construction. He describes himself as an Alpenbub, a boy of the Alps, who is determined to ‘give’ the Gotthard Mountains a tunnel.526 He jeopardises his personal fortune because he is convinced that modern technology will allow him to keep the deadline and construct the tunnel within



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eight years. More experienced engineers warn Favre that the mountain should not be underestimated.527 According to them, the mountain is alive and has a will of its own. They emphasise that the Gotthard will always be mightier than humankind and technology.528 Favre brushes aside their advice, maintaining that a mountain cannot live.529 Nevertheless, Favre seeks to establish a relationship with the mountain. He wonders why the Gotthard remains cold, silent and dead, despite his attempts to make the mountain comply with his wish to tunnel it. Increasingly frustrated by the Gotthard’s disobedience, Favre gives an all-out effort with all possible technological force. This effort also is fruitless. Only gradually does Favre perceive the Gotthard as a living being and he comes to admit that he is fighting against something larger than himself. He realises that he has to overcome the solidity of something older and more resistant than just rock. He refers to the Gotthard as primeval rock (Urgestein). That is the moment he doubtfully asks his daughter, Marie, who visits the works one day: “Is stone not just stone? Can stone be alive?”530 The character Gubbio represents this ‘stone’, when he returns from his hermit’s life on the Gotthard to lead an aggressive rebellion against the tunnel construction. He proclaims that the Gotthard does not want to be tunnelled. A direct confrontation with Gubbio on the pass, where Gubbio tries to kill Favre, leads to a dialogue between the two men. Favre does not comprehend the animosity of this local. Gubbio explains that the Gotthard dislikes Favre because he is boring a “Hole through the mountain, which God purposely filled with stones” and prophesies that Favre will have to pay for this violation with his own blood. Favre offers a peace treaty: he is willing to pay any price to stop Gubbio’s sabotage but demands a confrontation with the mountain without Gubbio as intermediary.531 Gubbio accepts this. Consequently, the Gotthard draws Favre closer into the battle. The turning point occurs when Favre visits the chapel on the Gotthard. Contemplating there, he realises he has been fighting the Gotthard instead of loving and caring for it. After this revelation, Favre doubts the purpose of his battle. Others reassure him and legitimise the construction as a way to unify Europe and to create a foundation for peace. Nevertheless, Favre seems battle-weary. During what will become his last visit to the tunnel, Favre suddenly perceives a stone body next to him in which he recognises the Gotthard. It comes to Favre full of light, as if it sings to him, speaks to him and finally loves him.532 Favre dies while his hand reaches for the mountain of light.533 Soon after his death, labourers continue Favre’s mission “to bring light from one end of the tunnel to the other.”534 Finally, the Gotthard gives up its resistance and even appears to help the work towards the breakthrough.

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In the last scene Favre and Escher renew their bond. During the breakthrough festivities, the Gotthard witnesses something the other people do not see. Two shadow figures, Escher and Favre, embrace each other in a ‘dazzling light’. The two forces Wille und Tat, will (Escher) and deed (Favre), celebrate the successful tunnel construction.535 This embrace also symbolises the success of the mission of these two Swiss citizens who combined their forces and sacrificed themselves for a greater good. In Fontana’s novel, Favre accepts his own death because shortly before he was able to reconcile himself with the Gotthard and to feel the love of this mountain. In this novel, Favre sacrifices himself to reconcile the Gotthard Mountain with the tunnel. Significantly, the mountain allows itself to be subjugated, without which the conquering of the mountain would have remained impossible.536 Favre’s reference to Urgestein earlier in the novel makes clear that he sensed that the Gotthard Mountains represented something fundamental that formed an impregnable, solid core. Parallels play an equally central role in this novel as in the other Gotthard novels. Both Favre and the Gotthard strive for brotherhood and peace. Gubbio wrongly assumes that the Gotthard and the tunnel opposed each other and did not recognise the possibility of reconciliation. Bühler’s and Fontana’s narratives call up the tension between the Gotthard Tunnel and the traditional community on the pass. In both cases, reconciliation between tradition and modernity is only possible through a large sacrifice: Favre’s life. In both cases Favre volunteers because he is convinced he is dying for a greater good (freedom, cultural exchange between people, brotherhood). Moreover, he acquires respect for the Gotthard and the traditional values it incorporates, which appease him with his own values. Favre’s insight and voluntary sacrifice commands admiration from the local population. They realise that Favre’s modernist aims did not differ much from their own traditional ones. Finally, Christianity plays an important role. In Fontana’s novel Favre comes to see the Gotthard as a mountain of a loving God and sees the light. In Bühler’s play, God sends Saint Mikael as a sign that Favre bridged darkness and light.

The co-construction of Swiss identity and the Gotthard Tunnel During the interbellum, the Second World War and even into the Cold War, the Gotthard circulated in Swiss society as an actively mobilised, central image of Swiss national identity. In this period the construction of a passage over or through



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the Gotthard Mountains became a popular theme among writers. Many of these novels and plays were published and reprinted throughout this period. The previous chapters illustrated the different phases in which the Gotthard Railway and Tunnel became popularised. Engineers, officials, newspapers nor travel literature foregrounded the mutual construction of Swiss national identity and the construction of the Gotthard Railway. However, the Gotthard fiction embedded the railway construction into contemporary Swiss nationalist claims. Chable’s rebel novel was an exception even though the German translator tried to fit the novel better into the dominant nationalist discourse. All novels illustrate how the Gotthard became a central icon that expressed Swiss uniqueness. Moreover, they actively included technological elements in the image of the Gotthard as a bulwark of Swissness, a passage point, a natural fortress, the centre of Europe and the core of Swiss spiritual defence. Novelists did cultural work to fit the Gotthard as a technological project into the dominant image of the Gotthard as a geographical centre. The novelists made conscious choices in setting, characters and style. On the one hand they maintained to the basic historical timeline, persons and events. On the other hand, interpretative liberties that they took rendered the tunnel construction a Swiss affair. All the main characters are Swiss nationals, ranging from the tunnel workers to the Gotthard Railway Company engineers. Their motives to construct the tunnel relate strongly to their sense of belonging to the Swiss Gotthard Pass (Brosi and Sebastien) or to Switzerland (Escher and Favre in both foreign novels). Moreover, by simply choosing the Gotthard as a theme for their novels, the authors provoked a rich set of associations by their Swiss readership. The novels interlocked with the well-known history of the Gotthard Tunnel construction and the Gotthard’s rich symbolism in Swiss society. Favre and Escher had already become Swiss national heroes, but the tunnel construction knew many international aspects. Yet, the novels re-write the story as exclusively Swiss. The personification of the Gotthard is also a central element in all novels: the stone is alive. The narratives represent the Gotthard as a mountain that can bewitch, fight and love. The protagonists thus develop a close relationship with the mountain. In all cases, the characters experience the Gotthard as mightier than they are (despite the technological tools they bring). Only by recognising this power, can the tunnel be built. The novelists created this fictive setting within the same storyline of the Gotthard Tunnel construction that was communicated in other media to the Swiss, for example in history books and travel guides. This historical setting gave authenticity to the plots in addition to which the novelists used their artistic freedom to voice and interpret the story to accentuate different elements.

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In response to the nineteenth-century modernisation processes, the first wave of Heimat literature highlighted the classical dichotomies between modernity and tradition, technology and nature, and younger and older generations. The Gotthard literature reverted to the same themes, in a period when Swiss inhabitants felt that Swiss national identity and unity was threatened. Hence, the lonely battle of a male character against mighty nature and the importance of family values.537 On the one hand the characters embraced and defended modernity, on the other hand they realised how technological change might destroy traditional values. Clearly, the Heimat feeling did not necessarily lead to an anti-modern statement.538 Reverting to Heimat themes and styles made it possible to re-write the Gotthard Tunnel history as a story about the struggle to appropriate the Gotthard Tunnel within the symbolic Gotthard landscape. The classic tensions between modernity and tradition dissolve in the course of the fictive appropriation process.539 In Chable’s novel this leads to the defeat of the romantic mysticism, in the other novels to reconciliation between modernity and tradition. The reconciliation comes at a price. In the narratives of Bühler and Fontana, the character Louis Favre sacrifices his life to reconcile the Gotthard landscape and the tunnel. In the other two novels the protagonists struggle to balance modernity and tradition: Brosi has to pay for it with burns in his face and Sebastien dies. These sacrifices for a greater cause merge seamlessly with war rhetoric, in which the state asks people to sacrifice their lives in defence of the nation, the Heimat. The love for the Heimat drives all main characters in the novels. In the first set of novels, the characters’ reference to the Heimat is not the Swiss nation, but the Gotthard region. In many respects, the Gotthard region stands for Switzerland. The image of the Heimat advertised a sense of national belonging. 540 Especially in the popular literature of this period, the Alps and its inhabitants symbolise the ‘real Swiss’. Moreover, the appreciation of the Gotthard as the spiritual and military core of Switzerland makes loyalty to the Gotthard equal to loyalty to Switzerland. Still, there is a difference between the narratives. Chable’s character Sebastien rebels against authority, so his deeds are selfish, rather than nationalistic. In Schnetzer’s novel, Brosi struggles for his region, his homeland and defends traditional values through this struggle. This plot is clearly nationalistic and based on the spiritual defence rhetoric. In the second set of novels, the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel becomes a background from which values ascribed to Switzerland can emerge. Louis Favre sacrificed his life for freedom and brotherhood as an example to Swiss – and European – citizens. The novelists created narratives in which the fundamental values inscribed in the Gotthard paralleled those of Switzerland and humanity.



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To the existing national imagery of the Gotthard Mountains and its inhabitants, the novels added the central role of technology. Swiss values survived the transition from tradition to modernity and they materialised in the tunnel, especially those themes central to Swiss national identity such as freedom, Christianity, social solidarity, love for the Fatherland and work ethic. The novels also alluded to the popular image of the Swiss as an idealised, simple and true dweller in the Gotthard Mountains. The novels adapted this traditional image to the modern, technological world, without losing the key values.541 This occurs not only in the novels focused on the Gotthard Tunnel construction but also in all the novels about the Gotthard as a material passage point published in this era (also those not discussed here). Thürer, for example, wrote in his early play about the Gotthard: “The Swiss Confederation came about through a deed of technology.”542 Without the construction of these passages, Switzerland’s existence would have been impossible.543 The novels illustrated and strengthened this conclusion by focusing on the construction and appropriation of the Gotthard as a human-made passage point. By constructing bridges and tunnels, Switzerland facilitated physical and spiritual international traffic, thereby reaching guardianship of this major European passage point. In this manner, the novels present the Gotthard as a regional microcosm for observing the production of Swiss and universal values. Celebrating the fight for creating these passage points the Gotthard became a ‘signpost’ for Switzerland and an example to Europe at war. The main characters of the novels I discussed here experienced the shifts in the relations between the Gotthard as a symbolic space, the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel and their feelings of belonging. Balancing these three elements anew eliminated the tensions between them. Through the narrative structures and the use of characters and themes, a triad was created between these three elements: the construction of the new passage way affected perceptions of Gotthard Mountains; the new technological project influenced the awareness of the Heimat; and the connection between Heimat feelings and the Gotthard became redefined. The seamless union of the Gotthard space with the Gotthard Tunnel and Swiss identity was exemplified by the dramatic events in the novels. Saying that ‘The Gotthard needs a guardian’ encompassed the complete image: Favre, as the representative of modernity and nationalist sentiments, became the guardian of the Gotthard symbolism the moment he died in the tunnel. This image of guardianship had a military connotation that fit seamlessly the Gotthard as the last stronghold in the Swiss réduit national.

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For the novelists, the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel formed a point of departure to address larger themes. By rewriting the Gotthard Tunnel’s history they convey an image and a message about Swiss national identity. The Gotthard landscape with its ambiguous symbolism, its practices and materiality, its past, present and future all crystallised in the reference to the ‘Gotthard’. The novels mirrored, altered and enhanced the Gotthard myth. Fifty years after the tunnel construction, the stories suggested a co-construction of Swiss national identity and the Gotthard Railway. The novels represent the Gotthard Tunnel as the ultimate materialisation of Swiss national identity.



Conclusion

Conclusion

Curiosity about the Gotthard as a Swiss national image gave me the impulse to do this research. In today’s Switzerland, the Gotthard metaphor represents a nineteenth-century railway project, a symbolic alpine space and national identity. The construction of the Gotthard Railway took place between 1872 and 1882, a period in which national identity formation increased in Europe. After the foundation of several large nation states, such as Italy and Germany, people in Switzerland – founded as a nation state in 1848 – intensified their search for a Swiss national identity. For the Swiss the Alps became a major national icon. At the same time, the construction of the Gotthard Railway and especially its Alpine tunnel stirred the minds of engineering experts, politicians and a large interested audience in Switzerland and Europe. In the late nineteenth century, contemporaries commonly emphasised the blessings of large technological projects as fulfilments of a country’s dreams. These parallel developments through which people searched to give meaning to both large technological projects and national identity made interaction possible. Hence, this research started with the hypothesis that the power of the Gotthard image in Swiss society resulted from the co-construction of technology and identity. In my research, I moved away from the majority of existing Gotthard studies that focus either on the history of the Gotthard Railway or on the Gotthard’s geographical importance. The interaction between the construction of a large technological project and expressions of Swiss national identity has remained largely unexplored and herein lies the novelty of this study. It offers insight into the multilayered process of the mutual construction of technology and identity. This is a subject barely touched upon in historical case studies on technology. The co-construction of technology and identity played out differently than I assumed. Reference to Swiss national identity did not enter any of the major engineering debates about the chosen construction method of the Gotthard Tunnel. Even though a patriotic, Austrian tunnel engineer started the polemic, the team of engineers working on the Gotthard Tunnel construction did not respond with nationalist arguments to his allegations. They did not seize the opportunity to claim the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel as a Swiss endeavour or as a choice for a Swiss construction method. In the debate, no evidence suggested that engineers

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used a sense of Swiss national identity or Swiss engineering tradition in defence of their technical choices. Remarkably, about seventy years later, before and during the Second World War, novelists took the construction and appropriation of the Gotthard Tunnel by the local population of the Gotthard Mountains as their major theme. In these novels, the words and deeds of the protagonists, both engineers and workers, explicitly rendered the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel a Swiss accomplishment. The novelists presented the tunnel as the materialisation of Swiss national identity by rewriting its history. In the intervening years, several actors helped constructing this intimate link between the technological project and Swiss identity; therefore, I conclude that it is a retrospective construction rather than the result of meaning production during the construction phase. The cultural work done in years between the building and the Second World War gradually made the Gotthard Railway into a national project; the Gotthard Mountains into a national space; and the Gotthard into an icon of Swiss national identity. My research goals shifted from a search for explicit references to Swiss identity in discussions about the Gotthard Railway construction (and vice versa) towards an understanding of the extent to which Swiss inhabitants and foreigners appropriated the line by creating linkages between Swiss national identity and the Gotthard Railway in their speeches, newspapers and travel guides. In the tinkering hands of dignitaries, newspaper journalists, travel guide writers and novelists, the interrelationship between Swiss national identity and the Gotthard Railway took shape. In these different phases, actors added, revisited and combined sentiments, memories and practices into the increasingly rich Gotthard symbolism. Finally, this unorchestrated and contested process resulted in an imagery in which Swiss national identity overlapped with the symbolism evoked by the Gotthard Railway. In the following sections, I will revisit the preceding chapters to point at several recurring aspects that help to understand the strength of the Gotthard as a national image. I will also propose some themes for further research.

The Gotthard: metaphoric synthesis of tensions After the completion of the tunnel, the official opening took place in May 1882. The ‘official’ inaugural speeches of the Gotthard Railway triggered different reactions in the newspapers. The festivities formed an opportunity to express either hopeful or pessimistic sentiments about the change the Gotthard Railway would bring to



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Swiss society. In the speeches and celebrations, dignitaries positioned Switzerland as a modern European country that, with the construction of an international railway line, contributed to European civilisation. Swiss newspapers reporting on the event contrasted this image with critical notes. Several writers of the newspaper articles expressed their fear that opening the country might lead to a loss of specific Swiss features and Swiss national identity. Moreover, only few regions would gain from this new transit. The protests against the universalised tone of the dignitaries demonstrate how regional newspapers reflected on their country’s identity. During the Gotthard Railway’s inauguration, two images of Switzerland collided, one emphasising Switzerland’s openness to a modern Europe, the other claiming the potential loss of Swiss national and regional attainments. Yet, despite these contrasts, the belief in national unity helped the Swiss to accept change as necessary for Switzerland’s future as a confederation, even when it required regional sacrifices. After the period of heightened attention, the Gotthard Railway turned into a functional international traffic axis supplying the industries of North-Western Europe and Northern Italy. It reduced travel time substantially, since it allowed fast freight transport through Switzerland and the Alps. The Gotthard Railway Company (after 1909, the Swiss Federal Railways) profited from the increase in international traffic and trade. From this moment onward, tourists could reach the famous tourist destinations near the Italian Lakes without changing modes to pass the Swiss mountains. The effectiveness of the transit made Switzerland a passage country through which tourists could move fast. In an effort to prevent the marginalisation of Swiss regions, the tourist industry marketed the Gotthard region as Switzerland’s latest tourist magnet. Travel guides prepared the Gotthard gaze, which tourists could easily adopt. In doing so, they emphasised the Gotthard as one of Switzerland’s most attractive regions: a ride on the Gotthard rails meant a comfortable and spectacular means to cross ‘the heart of Switzerland’, which included sensational and educational moments galore. In this phase of popular appropriation, renowned travel guide writers mixed references to Alpine nature with images of the technological sublime and Swiss national characteristics. The writers, both Swiss and foreign – often pedagogues and teachers – mobilised the pool of existing and new images, legends, stories and practices surrounding the Gotthard to turn it into a worthy destination for Swiss and foreign tourists. They did so with sensitivity to the taste of the modern tourists and travellers. The Gotthard Railway strung together sites of interest, existing mythology, new landscapes and developing Swiss history. It accumulated into a typical encounter with Switzerland. Travel guides offered tourists the tools

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and ideas to enjoy the Gotthard properly and to recognise it as the very heart of Switzerland. Each of these phases added to the Gotthard as a national image. Finally, during the national defence, novelists embedded the Gotthard’s railway and tunnel in the discourse about national identity. They drew on elements that others had developed before, to place them into a stronger nationalist light. Aside from the Gotthard’s spatial myth developed and mobilised by the Swiss elite, others used the power of the Gotthard image as it had developed in discourses surrounding the Gotthard Railway for a broader audience. The figure of Louis Favre presented as a pragmatic, caring, energetic man recurred in the novels and the newly written or re-issued biographies of important Swiss heroes. In the 1870s, the tunnelling debate already showed the roots of this characterisation of Favre, by some celebrated and by other despised for his antitheoretical attitude towards tunnelling. In retrospect, the Swiss tunnel engineer, Charles Andreae, deemed Favre’s tunnelling method a typical, pragmatic Swiss mix of different tunnelling styles. Moreover, the international and modernising aspects of the Gotthard Railway construction, as both celebrated and feared during the inaugural festivities, became increasingly represented as a milestone in Swiss history and as an example of Swiss national unity and prosperity. The festivities around the Gotthard’s 50th anniversary revealed this. Furthermore, the standardised tourist gaze as it developed during the belle époque fit the Swiss domestic tourist market. During the interwar period, travelling the Gotthard became a typical Swiss outing, which conveyed the abstract notion of a national identity. At the same time, travelling the Gotthard was presented as a metaphysical experience during which people entered the birth ground of the Swiss nation and travelled the ultimate passage point from grey civilised Northern (German-speaking) Europe to the sunny and backward (Italian-speaking) Southern Europe. The Gotthard Railway not only made this trip physically possible but also formed part of the ritual during which Swiss values could be experienced or Swiss national identity performed. The Gotthard image served the felt need for an image that would represent the unity of the Swiss people, endangered by major tensions in Switzerland and Europe. The defenders of Swiss national virtues made use of all these elements to strengthen the Gotthard image as both a bulwark of Swiss identity and a signpost for Europe. By identifying the Gotthard Tunnel, the Gotthard Mountains and its people as typically Swiss both the Gotthard’s spatial and material myths became bundled as a metaphor for freedom and exchange between peoples. Writers



Conclusion

presented the Gotthard as an ideal microcosm representing universal values that had to be guarded by the Swiss. The images of the Gotthard crystallised, and still crystallise, what Switzerland wanted to stand for in Europe. The discourses surrounding the Gotthard Railway contributed to the construction of Swiss national identity and vice versa, because the railways offered ways to perform Swissness. It allowed simulateneously to admire the Swiss workers who built the tunnel, the mythical Swiss landscape and sites of Swiss national history. Yet, the polyvocality of images of the Gotthard circulating in Swiss society today emphasise that the creation of the Gotthard image cannot and should not be told as a linear story in which the image of the Gotthard railway developed from a multi-interpretable to a univocal national image. The Gotthard image refuses to be captured in one visual image or text. Rather, the different images of the Gotthard evoke a similar set of associations.

National identity and its ‘bricoleurs’ Academic literature on the construction of the alpine myth emphasises the importance of the ‘outsider’s eye’ for the construction of the alpine myth in Switzerland. These outsiders built up and idealized image of the Alps and its inhabitants. The image of a romantic, peaceful, harmonious alpine environment with virtuous, modest cowherds became constructed and reconstructed in, for example, travel guides, advertisements and novels. The alpine image offered (and offers) a valuable counter-image to an imagined audience of people in cities of the lowlands.544 The medievalist Guy Marchal argues that through the ages, these urban elites constructed the Gotthard as an image within the Swiss nationalist Alpine myth.545 Yet, studying the discourses around the Gotthard from the angle of the railway demonstrates the production of an image on a popular level. In none of the phases, historical actors consciously aimed at producing a link between the two discourses. Other political, commercial or social issues were at stake, such as discussions about modernisation processes, about opening a tourist region or about Swiss national identity. The producers of the image consisted of, among others, engineers, journalists, politicians, travel guide writers and novelists who aimed to generate a clear message to reach as large an audience as possible. I argue that the construction of these popular images aimed at a middle class strengthened the Gotthard as a metaphor of Swiss national identity. A critical look shows the dominance of the Gotthard as an image created by and for people outside of the Gotthard region: engineers from abroad who internationally discussed the tunnel progress; international dignitaries who celebrated

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modernity; city dwellers who wrote travel guides for (foreign) tourists; and novelists who gave voice to local Gotthard inhabitants by romanticising their lives to the taste of the readers outside of the region. The local population appeared almost only as supernumerary actors within the Alpine myth. The different historical actors discussed in the previous chapters somehow projected dreams and values onto the Gotthard to underline their various messages. Therefore, the construction of a national image is also an act of power, to which not every Swiss citizen has equal access.546 The construction of the Gotthard imagery tells a story about winners and losers, gains and losses, regions and countries linked and de-linked, and centrality and margins. Yet, the intriguing question is: what made the Gotthard image so popular as an expression of Swiss national identity despite its one-sided and constructed nature? I argue that the strength of the imagery lies in its ‘pliabilty’ and potential to obsorb tensions without erasing them. Actors used the Gotthard as it embraced the dichotomies of the national and the international, the regional and the national, nature and technology, war and peace, bulwark and passage point, north and south, and unifier and divider. It helped to strategically position Switzerland between major nation states, while the Swiss government juggled between legitimizing national autonomy and keeping good relationships with its powerful neighbours. Internally however, Switzerland remained religiously and politically divided in culturally distinct regions. All these historical actors communicated the Gotthard image in its capacity to synthesise differences, tensions and styles. The Gotthard image encompassed the ambiguities in Swiss culture thereby strengthening its potential to serve as a national image. The Gotthard image expressed Switzerland’s acclaimed ability to mediate; actors used it in those periods in which this dreamed ability was most threatened.

Revisiting the Gotthard myth The Gotthard myth cannot be understood without understanding the history of Gotthard Railway and its appropriation. It does not suffice to argue that the arrival of the railways simply attracted more attention to the existing spatial symbolic of the Gotthard Mountains. My study reveals unexplored discourses and perspectives that illustrate that the arrival of the railways allowed people to appreciate the mythical Gotthard landscape differently. It illustrates that the Gotthard myth cannot only be appreciated as a political and elitist alpine space but also as a space altered by the arrival and popular appreciation of the Gotthard Railway. Including



Conclusion

the arrival of the railway in studying the Gotthard myth allows a different perspective on the Gotthard’s mythical spatiality. In the period under study, various actors presented the construction of the Gotthard Railway as a major scientific and technological endeavour with which humankind tamed the capricious Swiss Alpine nature. The taming of nature recurs as a classical theme in the construction of Swiss national identity, exemplified by the Gotthard Pass. The pass over the Gotthard Mountains allegedly opened in the 13th century. The Swiss image of creating passages through the mountains has become a key element in the construction of a Swiss national identity. The Gotthard Tunnel became presented as one of the most impressive examples of taming the Alps that reinforced the unity of the Swiss confederation. This image allowed both for celebrating Switzerland’s power to create breaches in the Alpine wall and for showing Swiss vulnerability to external influences. As a spatial image, the Swiss Alps incorporated technological progress, alpine beauty and Swiss national identity. It illustrates how an economically marginalised region became increasingly symbolically centralised. The Gotthard Railway deprived the Gotthard region of its pass economy, yet region re-emerged as the nationally celebrated core of Switzerland and even the ‘heart’ of Europe. This research contributes primarily to scholarship on the maintenance of national identity, as it shows that national identity is never self-evident and needs constant reinforcement.547 This body of literature understands a national sense of belonging as materialised in daily life, in which abstract notions of the state become tangible. In their material form, these abstract notions gain power as omnipresent, even though not necessarily consciously linked to expressions of the nation. I argue that through the creation of national heroes, such as Louis Favre, and collective memories, such as ‘travelling through the heart of Switzerland’, Swiss citizens were offered ways to articulate and experience Swissness.548 The museum displays to which I referred in the introduction revive these elements even today, although the message is not solely nationalist anymore. Despite the importance of the discourses surrounding the Gotthard Railway, the power of the Gotthard image cannot be understood without considering the spatial myth. The Gotthard landscape played a role in both the appropriation of the Gotthard Railway and in the expression of Swiss national identity. Throughout the phases of ‘bricolage’, the developing Gotthard Alpine myth and the Gotthard

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Railway image became connected. This research illustrates how people, while striving for different goals, tinkered with images of the Gotthard’s materiality in the shifting context of its spatial symbolic. The railways as a technological endeavour mixed with the existent elements of the Gotthard as a spatial myth. My investigation of the interlinkages between the spatial and the material sheds light on how a technological project can play role(s) in the construction of national identity. It also shows how the Gotthard space became the locus of symbols with regard to both the technological project and Swiss national identity. It is possible to understand how the image of co-construction took shape by studying the constructed nature of identity, technology and space. Studying both the symbolic and material aspects of spaces make historians more sensitive to the role of identity formation in technological developments.

Internationality nationalised Reflecting on my first encounters with the Gotthard image, I realise my research reveals another important, yet unexpected, aspect. Although I started by observing the Gotthard as a national image, my empirical work illustrated that international issues played a far more important and formative role in the production of meaning than I anticipated. I conclude that, in the period between the Gotthard Tunnel construction and the Second World War, the Gotthard Railway shifted from being a symbol of a (contested) major international technological endeavour that positioned Switzerland in modern Europe, to being an icon of Swiss national identity that expressed Switzerland’s uniqueness in Europe. In time, the international aspects of the history of the Gotthard Tunnel construction were silenced, modified and nationalised. To render the international aspects of the tunnel construction and the railways useful for a nationalist discourse, the internationality became presented as a national feature, silencing the international aspects. In the late nineteenth century, the Gotthard Railway’s construction and its inauguration created an atmosphere of internationality. Its construction began as an international, rather than a national, project. (Foreign) governments played out their national interests in realising a passage point through Switzerland. The project was only feasible through international cooperation because the construction of a tunnel through the Alps was a highly political affair that required major investments. International investors financed the construction of the Swiss railway network and primarily foreign engineers built them. For decades, different international coalitions fought to realise ‘their’ crossing over the Swiss Alps. The young Swiss nation had neither the financial means nor the political power to end the fierce battle between the different projects. Powerful German and Italian



Conclusion

governments put their cards on the Gotthard Tunnel construction through neutral Swiss territory. An international tender, international investments, internationally renowned engineers and Italian workers made the construction possible. During the opening festivities, none of the dignitaries talked about unequal international power relations. The festive inauguration of the Gotthard Railway took place during a tense period in European and Swiss relations. Switzerland tried to position itself as a strategic passage point in international rail traffic hoping to gain a position as mediator between other national powers. For Germany and Italy, the Gotthard axis meant a fast and convenient railway link from major industrial areas over Swiss neutral territory. Hence, freight could circumvent France and Austria. The construction of the new Alpine passage was also a geo-political move that strengthened the alliance between Germany and Italy, as well as with their small neighbour. Rather than mentioning political problems, the dignitaries articulated successful international cooperation and the universal blessings of technology and science. In the rhetoric, the Gotthard Railway became the ultimate materialisation of (inter)national cooperation, heralding peace for the future of Europe as a whole. The Swiss dignitaries rejoiced that Switzerland now played a significant role in this European civilising mission. The newspapers granted Gotthard Railway as an international railway axis the benefit of the doubt because it promised to improve the economic situation in Switzerland. Moreover, the officially presented images of Switzerland were consistent with the discourses about building a Switzerland that would function as a neutral mediator in Europe. In the subsequent phases of appropriation, the image of the Gotthard Railway became increasingly linked to the Gotthard Mountains and Swiss national territory. Yet, the image was presented to an audience of German-speaking tourists from Germany, Austria and Switzerland. To make the region internationally attractive, the travel guides emphasised the authenticity of the Gotthard space and railways as the ultimate junction in Europe. The Gotthard linked international railway networks, cultures and alpine chains on an ultimately Swiss territory. In time, travelling the Gotthard became increasingly nationalised. In the 1930s and 40s, the Gotthard became the metaphor that could become a national icon of Swiss identity: the Gotthard, as the Swiss core, needed protection against foreign influences. The space became fortified to defend the Gotthard as a strategic European passage point and as the symbolic core of Swiss identity. The Gotthard symbolised freedom, independence and unification of cultures and served as an example for a war-torn Europe. Switzerland’s own acclaimed role as mediator returns in the pre-war rhetoric. Georg Thürer represented Switzerland as peaceful micro-Europe that guided the European countries into peaceful co-habitation.

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As a Swiss icon of internationality, the Gotthard could give direction to peace in Europe, as Thürer mentioned. Paradoxically, while the Gotthard image gained its full strength as a Swiss icon, the war economies of Germany and Italy profited from the Gotthard Railway. Swiss neutrality allowed freight trains between Italy and Germany throughout the Second World War. This led to the contradictory situation that the bulwark of Swiss spiritual defence served the war economy.549 In this period, novelists chose the Gotthard Tunnel construction as their subject matter. Their fictional narratives nationalised the construction process of the Gotthard Railway. They rewrote the construction featuring Swiss characters and Swiss virtues. The Gotthard changed from an internationally celebrated symbol of cooperative nation states to a symbol that internalised internationality. This research, therefore, also shows how internationality became part of the discourse on national identity. The case of the Gotthard Railway shows that, through the process of tinkering, an infrastructure project can obtain meaning as both international and national. This conclusion relates this research to recent interests in the history of technology that focus on transnational infrastructures to explain an emerging Europe. A special issue of the journal History and Technology argues for adding a technological perspective to the existing histories of Europeanization.550 The articles emphasise the importance of studying materiality in the process of the construction (and deconstruction) of Europe. Studied from the perspective of infrastructures, the creation of Europe is not only a political or economic process centred on institutionalisation but also a result of material infrastructures. The research on the Gotthard contributes to this question because it points out the importance of meaning production surrounding large technological projects constructed across borders.551 It shows how the production of meaning takes place through backgrounding and foregrounding references to national and international aspects. Historical research on national identity, international projects and symbolic spaces is highly topical. The European Commission encourages the construction of new ‘missing links’ in international infrastructures that often cross natural barriers that form borders between countries. The link between creating an international linkage and creating a European identity is often implied. This research shows that the production of meaning surrounding these infrastructure projects turns out more capricious than can be foreseen. What makes infrastructure ‘international’ depends strongly on the appropriation of the technological project. It also points at the simultaneity of images, which, in the Gotthard case, illustrates



Conclusion

how international and national aspects can be appreciated without being seen as dichotomous. The meaning production surrounding technology, space and identity interlocks in unpredictable ways.

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Epilogue

Epilogue

‘Ambiguity’ is the best word with which to conclude. Throughout my search to understand the Gotthard as a national image, I saw the Gotthard image recurring as often as I saw it slipping away. When I thought I understood, it changed face, meaning or intensity. It was everything and nothing; alive and dead; powerful and laughed at; used and abused. Through my Gotthard research, Swiss friends started to accuse me smilingly of being more Swiss than they themselves. Those types of comments were just as ambivalent as the Gotthard image. They made me reflect on my position as an outsider, studying a classical Swiss image: maybe the vehement search for the Gotthard image lured me into believing that the Gotthard image was omnipresent and thus I believed in its strength more than the average Swiss citizen; or did I become super-Swiss because I could tell the Swiss details about their national image they barely knew? A lot of research about the Gotthard’s context had to be done before I grasped the richness of the Gotthard image, whereas for many Swiss, the icon had gained a sort of self-evident ‘feel’ that had no need for nuanced scrutiny. For those Swiss the Gotthard figures as some faint, but nevertheless well-known set of associations, which, in a positive or negative way, evokes a feeling of ‘something typically Swiss’. By deconstructing, historicising and contextualising the Gotthard as a national image, I re-constructed an image that might not circulate prominently in Swiss society today. Or does it? In 2007, the Gotthard Railway celebrates its 125th jubilee year. During the preparation for this celebration, the Swiss debate about the future of the railway line. The Swiss government ordered the construction of a new major rail tunnel under the Gotthard Mountains to link to the European high speed railway network.552 To create an environment-friendly transit of goods through Switzerland, the Swiss people agreed in a referendum to support rail infrastructure rather than the development of roads. The old Gotthard railway line, with its curves and steepness, cannot carry the projected increase in European demand for freight and speed. In contrast to the old line, the new one will create ‘a flat rail link for future travel through the Alps’. Passenger trains will bridge the distance between Zurich and

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Milan in two hours and fifty minutes when the Gotthard Base Tunnel is open for traffic, a time reduction of an hour or more. With the construction of two additional tunnels in Switzerland, the travel time will be reduced even further. The line’s 57-km base tunnel – the largest tunnel in the world upon completion – forms the major technological and scientific challenge.553 Once again, the Gotthard region forms the decor for one of the world’s largest technological undertakings. When, in approximately ten years, this new link will be fully operational, the old railway line will become obsolete. The situation for the Gotthard region is paradoxical. On the one hand, the construction of the new tunnel will help improve the environmental situation in the valleys, as it promises to reduce the number of cars and trucks. Since 1980, when the Gotthard car tunnel opened its gates, the traffic rapidly increased, leaving the valley regions with growing noise and air pollution. On the other hand, the majority of transnational freight and passenger transit will pass under the mountainous region. Peace will likely return to the valleys, but might also deprive the inhabitants of a substantial part of their income. In that respect, history seems to repeat itself. Koller’s nineteenth-century painting of the Gotthard mail coach, which I described in the introduction, represents the transition from the mail coach era to train era. The mail coaches over the Gotthard Pass could not to compete with the speedy trains that started running through the Gotthard Tunnel from 1882 onward. The last mail coach became the Gotthard mountain region’s romantic counter image in the age of the railway, while leaving the pass economy ruined. Today, similar questions and fears arise. What will become of the old Gotthard railway track and its neighbouring regions now that the high speed train will soon enter their domain? Anno 2007, initiatives to turn the tide for the region are in full swing. The different cantons combine their powers and strive to realise ambitious projects.554 The promoters of ‘Porta Alpina’ draw much attention because their idea sounds too utopian to be true. They propose to use one of the vertical work shafts of the current tunnel construction after completion. An extra stop and station in the base tunnel should enable tourists to take an elevator up from the tunnel station directly into the alpine region above them. Even though critical voices ridicule the idea, the plan receives serious attention. Proponents, mainly from the canton Graubünden, use Switzerland’s pioneering history of constructing audacious tourist facilities to reinforce their arguments to invest in the ‘alpine elevator’.555 They refer to some major tourist attractions of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, such as the cogwheel train up the Mountain Rigi, the trains up to the Jungfraujoch and the helical tunnels of the Gotthard line. ‘Porta Alpina’, they argue, fits into this Swiss tradition of constructing audacious tourist magnets.



Epilogue

Promotional drawing of the planned ‘Porta Alpina’ in comparison to other major constructions.

Aside from profiting from the new infrastructure, the villagers along the old Gotthard line are trying to salvage the Gotthard line as industrial heritage. Plans are in full swing to have it declared a UNESCO world heritage site and thus an international tourist attraction. The successes and failures of the Austrian Semmering Railway (on this list since 1998) offer a valuable point of reference for these efforts. Another, partially related, idea is to use the old Gotthard Railway for leisure and education. There are plans to make a nature park of the canton Uri, a theme park of the Erstfeld shunting-yard and an Experience Platform in Wassen, with a view of the three helical tunnels. Moreover, a nostalgic steamboat trip from Lucerne to the Gotthard should heighten the attractiveness of the region. All these initiatives aim at securing the region’s tourist potential.556 All plans require united action. To make a strong case and to focus the various initiatives, the villages and cantons surrounding the Gotthard realise they need to cooperate. A clear definition of what geographically confines the Gotthard region is missing which means that the region’s borders are easily adapted to economic interest. The four cantons Ticino, Uri, Graubünden and Wallis that neighbour the Gotthard Mountains want to be involved. The idea is to market the Gotthard. A recently published report emphasises the need to brand the region under the name Gotthard (or Gottardo). This name has to provoke positive connotations

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that render the region an attractive place to visit and from which to buy goods and services. The website www.gotthard.ch claims: The Gotthard is an Alpine region at the heart of Europe. It was, and is, the most important freight link between north and south. The most important Western-European rivers, such as the Rhine, Rhone, Po and Donau, originate in the Gotthard region. Therefore, Gotthard is a source (Ursprung) of fertility and energy. The Gotthard is the centre and the backbone of Switzerland and is anchored strongly in the collective consciousness of the Swiss population. It is the central mountain (Berg der Mitte) and counts as a solid rock in Swiss history (Fels in der Brandung) – even world history. For centuries, the Gotthard linked different cultures, without which Switzerland would be unimaginable. Business travellers and tourists know the Gotthard; its name has become a household world all over Europe. This website explains the motives and goals of the Marke Gotthard©. According to this bilingual (German and Italian) site, the citizens from the Gotthard region have, until now, hardly profited from the use of the imagery of the Gotthard. The inhabitants themselves are motivated to recognise the commercial power and potential of the Gotthard image. To market its products and services, the brand Gotthard is meant to equate quality and sustainability. Hence, these Gotthard products and services offer a counter-image to the fast and cheap food culture. They may only be labelled ‘Gotthard’ when 50% of the product is made in the region or 50% of the money flows back to the region. The construction of the new Gotthard base tunnel adds an ironic chapter to the development of the Gotthard as an image. The current debate that develops around the future of the Gotthard region marks the living sentiments of the Gotthard myth. The canton Uri, that refused to celebrate the inaugural festivities in May 1882, will now use the Gotthard Railway’s jubilee year to plea for the conservation of the railway line.557 In a conscious attempt to market the Gotthard, people living in the region mobilise elements of the national Gotthard myth for local purposes. This marketing strategy organises the Gotthard imagery around a new cause. To help this cause, it uses the standardised and nationalised imagery that has developed around its region, to regionalise it again. Ironically, the proponents have to mobilise an imagery that has been developed and maintained largely by people outside the region. The claims to render the image profitable for the Gotthard region are explicit reactions to the feeling that the Gotthard image has been used by other people, but that the region itself never profited from the image’s fame.



Epilogue

The attention drawn to the Gotthard because of its railway jubilee will intensify the discussion about the Gotthard’s material, symbolic and economic importance for Switzerland and the Gotthard region. The journalist Thomas Bolli observes: “Somehow the Gotthard myth has become a myth itself.”558 Indeed, the discussion will put to test the mobilising strength of the Gotthard image. Has the existing set of associations enough power to convince people in Switzerland to invest tax money in the regional plans? Will the Gotthard image absorb the new associations of sustainability and quality? Will the support of the Swiss for this new Gotthard image suffice? Will the foreign tourist or investor be convinced by the existing Gotthard rhetoric? My study shows that the Gotthard image developed from an international to a national image, and more recently to a regional image. For the foreign eye, the Gotthard trademark is hard to perceive. The classical Swiss images of the red and white flag, the traditional cow bells and the pointy Matterhorn are easier to convey than the image of the Gotthard, so full of meaning, references, symbolism and history. The Gotthard can hardly be captured in one image. This is the paradox of the Gotthard image: its strengths and its weaknesses lie in the complex ambiguity of the image, which makes it both appealing and difficult to communicate it convincingly as an international trademark.

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Endnotes

Endnotes

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See website of the Kunsthaus Zürich: www.kunsthaus.ch/ausstellungen/2002/rudolf_koller/ schaffen/themen_motive/gotthardpost.html (October 2007). See also: Becker, Christoph, B. von Waldkirch and P. Pfister, Rudolf Koller, Zürich 2002 www.kunsthaus.ch/ausstellungen/2002/rudolf_koller/schaffen/themen_motive/gotthardpost.html At the entrance of the Swiss National Museum in Zurich stands an original FlüelenCamerlata coach. See for history of the Museum of Transport: Wisman, Hans, ‘Vom Eisenbahnmuseum zum Verkehrshaus der Schweiz’, in: Treichler, Hans-Peter (ed.), Bahnsaga Schweiz. 150 Jahre Schweizer Bahnen, Zürich, 1996, 195-196 See for a description of this model: Graf, Ruedi, ‘Schweiz-Bilder. Vom Gletschergarten zum Verkehrshaus. Eine Skizze’, in: Marchal, Guy P. and A. Mattioli (ed.), Erfundene Schweiz. Konstruktionen nationaler Identität/ La Suisse imagineé. Bricolages d’une identité nationale, Zürich, 1992, 235-244 In 1906, the Swiss-Italian Simplon Tunnel of almost 20 kilometres dethroned the Gotthard Tunnel when it exceded it in length. See: Elsasser, Kilian, The Railway and Switzerland. Railway exhibition and Gotthard Tunnel show at the Swiss Transport Museum, Luzern, 1997, 4. See for a similar quote the website Museum of Transport: www.verkehrshaus.ch/en/museum/schienenverkehr/gts.php (October 2007) Books for railway buffs pay ample attention to Swiss locomotive engines, among which those of the Gotthard. See for example: ‘Geballte Kraft am Gotthard. Die Doppel-Lokomotiven Ae 8/14 11801, 11851 und 11852, sowie die Ae 4/6-Lokomotiven 10801-10812’, Loki spezial 17, 1998. For a reflective work on the Gotthard myth see: Stalder, Helmut, Mythos Gotthard. Was der Pass bedeutet, Zürich, 2003 The 1882 Gotthard tourist guide in the series Europäische Wanderbilder by Jakob Hardmeyer-Jenny has become an expensive collector’s item, whereas the novel by Felix Moeschlin, Wir durchbohren den Gotthard, Zürich, 1957 (First edition 1947-1949) can be found cheaply in second hand book stores. For example, an early travel document by Johann Georg Sulzer (ca. 1780), who passed the Gotthard on his travels from Germany to Italy, and the latest book about the Gotthard: Boesch, Robert, Gotthardbahn, Zürich, 2007 In 1872, Martin Wanner (1829, Schaffhausen) became archivist and historian of the Gotthard Railway Company. See: Eggermann, Anton, ‘Beiträge zu einer Geschichte des Gotthardweges’, in: Eggermann, Anton (ed.), Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, Zürich, 1981, 23-83, 72; Wanner, Martin, Rückblick auf die Entstehung und den Bau der Gotthardbahn, Luzern, 1882; Wanner, Martin, Geschichte des Baues der Gotthardbahn, Luzern, 1885

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See for books about the history of the Gotthard Railway: Wanner, Rückblick auf die Entstehung und den Bau der Gotthardbahn; Wanner, Geschichte des Baues der Gotthardbahn; Eggermann, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard; Häsler Alfred A., Gotthard. Als die Technik Weltgeschichte schrieb, Frauenfeld, Stuttgart, 1982; Marti, Franz and W. Trüb, Die Gotthardbahn, Zürich, 1984; Unpublished: Kuoni, Konrad, “Allein ganz darf man die Humanitätsfrage nicht aus dem Auge verlieren”. Der Bau des Gotthard-Eisenbahntunnels in wirtschaftlicher, politischer und sozialer Hinsicht, Oberengstringen, 1996; Bösch, Gotthardbahn. For books on the Swiss railway history including the Gotthard Railway see: Thiessing, René, Ein Jahrhundert schweizer Bahnen 1847-1947 (Erster Band), Frauenfeld, 1947; Eggermann, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard; Treichler, Bahnsaga Schweiz 150 Jahre Schweizer Bahnen; Bärtschi, Hans-Peter (ed.), Kohle, Strom und Schienen. Die Eisenbahn erobert die Schweiz, Zürich, 1998 (first edition 1997); Arx, Heinz von (ed.), Der Kluge reist im Zuge. Hundert Jahre SBB, Zürich, 2001. Aside from these books, numerous articles and smaller leaflets appeared on the history of the Gotthard Railway, for example in the magazine of the Swiss Federal Railway SBB Revue. For example, in the introduction to the 1997 book, Fredy Rey, manager of the Museum of Transport, states carefully that Swiss railway history is full of myths which contemporary history writing does not want to debunk but rather wants to contextualise. Bärtschi, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 11 See for example: Treichler, Bahnsaga Schweiz, 107 Andrey, Georges, ‘Auf der Suche nach dem neuen Staat (1789-1848)’, in: Im Hof, Ulrich (ed.), Geschichte der Schweiz under der Schweizer, Basel, 2004 (first edition 1984), 527-637, 629 ff; see also: Zimmer, Oliver, A contested nation. History, memory and nationalism in Switzerland 1761-1891, Cambridge, 2003, 11 Ruffieux, Roland, ‘Die Schweiz des Freisinns (1848-1914)’, in: Im Hof, Geschichte der Schweiz under der Schweizer, 639-730, 639 Alfred Escher, speech November 12, 1849 cited in: Thiessing, Ein Jahrhundert schweizer Bahnen, 51; Treichler, Bahnsaga Schweiz, 106; Kuoni, Konrad, ‘Der Gotthard gewinnt das Alpenbahnringen’, in: Bärtschi, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 144 Thiessing, Ein Jahrhundert Schweizer Bahnen, 56. From 1850 until 1852, the Swiss engineer Gottlieb Koller – appointed chief of the Swiss national railway office – wrote an additional report about a possible alpine crossing. He proposed the Gotthard axis. For more on Koller see: Mathys, Ernst, Männer der Schiene 1847-1947, Bern, 1947; Eggermann, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, 158 At the time, the project-plans for a Lukmanier tunnel were the oldest and most developed. Main proponent was the Swiss chief cantonal engineer of Graubünden, Richard La Nicca (1794-1883). La Nicca studied engineering in Italy and was one of the few Swiss engineers involved in the early development of the railways. In 1845, canton Graubünden granted him a concession to build. Treichler, Bahnsaga Schweiz, 47, about La Nicca see 107; compare: Eggerman, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, 61 For example, the Swiss historian Jean-François Bergier explicitly mentions the process as the outcome of international politics in his Die Schweiz in Europa, Zürich, 1998 (French edition 1992), 96 The Semmering Railway connected the Austrian cities Vienna and Triest. Dinhobl, Günter, Die Semmeringbahn. Der Bau der ersten Hochgebirgseisenbahn der Welt, Wien, 2003 See for the history of the Mont Cénis/Fréjus Tunnel: Lesca, Corrado, Tre ingegneri per un traforo. La storia della ferrovia del Fréjus, Borgone di Susa, 1998; Saitz, Hermann H., Tunnel der Welt-Welt des Tunnel, Berlin, 1988, 28-33; Duluc, Albert, Le Mont Cenis. Sa route, son tunnel Contribution à l’histoire des grandes voies de communications, Paris, 1993 (first edition 1952) Treichler, Bahnsaga Schweiz, 48



Endnotes

Kuoni, Allein ganz, 20; Thiessing, Ein Jahrhundert schweizer Bahnen, 94; Elsasser, The Railway and Switzerland, 6 25 Kuoni, Allein ganz, 21 26 Lanfranconi, Karl J., ‘Die Baugeschichte’, in: Eggermann, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, 87-150, 92 27 The representatives designed the protocol which defined the technical framework of the international axis with up-to-date requirements: the highest point should not have been more than 1162 above sea level; the smallest radius under 300 meter and the gradient not more than 0.25 percent; and the tunnel needed to be executed with double tracks. See: Eggermann, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, 87 28 From 1850 until 1852, the Swiss engineer Gottlieb Koller, appointed chief of the Swiss national railway office, wrote an additional report about a possible alpine crossing and proposed the Gotthard axis. For more on Koller see: Mathys, Männer der Schiene, 1947, 202; see also: Lanfranconi, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, 58 29 In July 1870, the Swiss parliaments discussed the ratification of the treaty. Although the Gotthard Railway construction was more or less a fact, the opposition made itself heard. See for more details about this debate: Kuoni, Allein ganz, 25 30 See Kuoni, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 150. The Swiss cantons that contributed to the Gotthard Railway were: Ticino, Zurich, Basellandt, Aargau, Bern, Lucerne, Schwyz, Uri, Solothurn, Zug, Baselland, Thurgau, Obwalden, Nidwalden. Moreover, the cities Lucerne, Bern, Zoffingen and two railway companies: Nordostbahn and Centralbahn. I list them in order by the amount of their contribution, from high to low. See: Thiessing, Ein Jahrhundert schweizer Bahnen, 98 31 Kuoni, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 151 32 Joseph Zingg was a farmer’s son from Lucerne. See for a short biography on Zingg: Waldis, Alfred, Es began am Gotthard – eine Verkehrsgeschichte mit Pionierleistungen, Luzern, 2001, 162 33 See Lanfranconi, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, 91 34 For quantatative data about the exploitation of the line until 1908 see: Kalt, Robert, ‘Der Verkehr auf der Gotthardbahn gestern-heute-morgen’, in: Eggerman, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, 217-233, 219 35 Karl J. Lanfranconi discusses other parts of the line as well. His article is an exception. See: Lanfranconi, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, 112 ff 36 See for biographies on Louis Favre: Mathys, Männer der Schiene, 202: Richard, Eugène, Schweizer eigener Kraft. Nationale Karakterbilder für das Volk, Neuenburg, 1906; Ineichen, Joseph, Louis Favre. Der Erbauer des Gotthardtunnels, Luzern, 1907; Reinhart, Joseph, Hart wie Granit: Bilder aus dem Leben von Louis Favre, Aarau, 1934; Dehaas, ‘Louis Favre, der Erbauer des Gotthard Tunnels’, in: Schweizer Pioniere der Technik. Acht Lebensbilder grosser Männer der Tat , Zürich, 1944, 275-317; Spaeni, Alois, Louis Favre – Lebensbild eines schweizerischen Unternehmerpioniers, Winterthur, 1982; Vogel, Lukas, ‘Der Gotthard hat sein Haar gebleicht. Legenden und Wahrheiten um Louis Favre’, in: Bärtschi, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 181 37 See for the main biographies on Alfred Escher: Jung, Joseph, Alfred Escher 1819-1882. Der Aufbruch zur modernen Schweiz, Zürich, 2006; Gagliardi, Ernst, Alfred Escher, vier Jahrzehnte neuer Schweizergeschichte, Frauenfeld, 1919-1920 38 In recent years, more attention has been payed to the social circumstances. See: Kuoni, Kohle, Strom und Schienen; Binnenkade, Alexandra, ‘Leben in Göschenen – Vivere alla Casinotta. Alltag im Eisenbahnerdorf um 1875’, in: Bärtschi, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 191. Häberli argues that Felix Moeschlin in his historical novel Wir durchbohren den Gotthard (published 1947-1949) offered a first attempt to address the deporable circum24

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40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47

48 49 50 51 52 53 54

55

56 57 58

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stances and to name the ones responsible. Häberli, Hans P., Hinein in diesen Drachenschlund. Die Gotthardbahn in Literatur und Kunst, Zürich 2007, 57 The original titles: Stalder, Mythos Gotthard; Waldis, Es began am Gotthard; Stamm, Peter and P. Bühler, Gotthard, die steinerne Seele der Schweiz, Zürich, 1997; Wyss-Niederer, Arthur, Sankt Gotthard, Via Helvetica, Lausanne, 1979 (English translation: The Gotthard, Switzerland’s lifeline, 1979; French translation Le Saint-Gothard, Via Helvetia, 1979; Italian translation San Gottardo, Via Helvetia, 1980); Müller-Jabusch, M., Der Gotthard: die sehr merkwürdige Geschichte des Berges, der einen Staat gebar, Düsseldorf, 1958 Häsler, Gotthard. Als die Techniek Weltgeschichte schrieb, 22; Wyss-Niederer, Sankt Gotthard, Via Helvetica, 11-47 Stalder, Helmut, analyses this legend. See: Stalder, Mythos Gotthard, 43-52 See for example: Wyss-Niederer, Sankt Gotthard, Via Helvetica, 7 See Waldis, Es began am Gotthard, 12-13 See for example: Stamm, Gotthard, die steinerne Seele der Schweiz; Odermatt, Jean, Himmelsland, Zürich, 1997 Enklaar, Jattie and H. Esther, ‘Vivat Helvetica. Die Herausforderung einer nationalen Identität’, in: Duitse Kroniek 48, Amsterdam 1998, 6 Stalder, Mythos Gotthard, 10 ,14 Zimmer, Oliver, ‘In search of natural dentity: Alpine landscape and the reconstruction of the Swiss Nation’, Comparative Study of Society and History 40(4), 1998, 637-665; Marchal, Guy, ‘La naissance du mythe du Saint-Gotthard ou la longue découverte de l’ « homo alpinus » et de l’ « Helvetia mater fluviorum » (XVe s. -1949), in: Itinera 12, 1992, 35-53; Schauffelberger, Walter, ‘Das “Réduit National” 1940, ein militärhistorischer Sonderfall’, in: Marchal, Guy and A. Mattioli, Erfundene Schweiz. Konstruktionen nationaler Identität/ La Suisse imagineé. Bricolages d’une identité nationale, Zürich, 1992, 207-216, 207 ff; Lasserre, André, ‘Le people des bergers dans son “Réduit national”’, in: Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz, 191-206 Zimmer, Comparative Study of Society and History, 653 Marchal, Itinera, 36 Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz, 44 Marchal, Itinera, 42-44 Gonzague de Reynold in 1914, cited in: Marchal, Itinera, 46 Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz, 17; Marchal, Itinera, 45 See: Gugerli, David, Redeströme Zur Elektrifizierung des Schweiz, Zürich, 1992; Nye, David, Narratives and space. Technology and the construction of American culture, New York, 1997; Nye, David, America as second creation: Technology and narratives of new beginnings, Cambridge, 2003; Hård, Mikael and A. Jamison, The intellectual appropriation of technology: discourses on modernity, Cambridge, 1998 Zeller, Thomas,  Straße, Bahn, Panorama. Verkehrswege und Landschaftsveränderung in Deutschland von 1930 bis 1990, Frankfurt, New York, 2002; Zeller, Thomas, ‘Landschaften des Verkehrs. Autobahnen im Nationalsozialismus und Hochgeschwindigkeitsstrecken für die Bahn in der Bundesrepublik’, in: Technikgeschichte 64(4), 1997 Hecht, Gabrielle, The radiance of France. Nuclear power and national identity after World War II, Cambridge, 1998 Hecht, The radiance of France, 1 See for analyses of these trends in scholarly research on technology: Sørensen, Knut and W. Robin, Shaping technology, guiding policy. Concepts, spaces and tools, Cheltenham, 2002, 51; Staudenmaier, John M. S.J., ‘Rationality, agency, contingency: recent trends in the history of technology’, in: Reviews in American History 30, 2002, 168-181, 176 Pioneering work has been performed by Thomas P. Hughes (on large technological sy-



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63 64 65 66 67 68

69 70 71 72 73

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stems) Wiebe Bijker (social construction of technology) and Bruno Latour (actor network theory). Hall, Stuart, ‘The work of representation’, in: Hall, Stuart, Representation: Cultural representation and signifying practices, London, Thousand Oaks, 1997, 15-64, 44 Hall, Representation. Cultural representation and signifying practices; Hall, Stuart and P. DuGay Doing cultural studies. The Sony walkman story, London, 1997. In cultural studies, scholars have discussed the tensions between semiotics and materiality at length. See for example: Thomas, Julian, ‘The socio-semiotics of material culture’, in: Journal of material culture 3(1), 1998, 97-108 See for examples the theoretical introductions in: Gugerli, Redeströme, 14 (‘discursive Prozesse’); Hecht, Radiance of France, 11 (‘linguistic approach’); Hård, The intellectual appropriation of technology, 14 (‘discursive framework’); Edwards, Paul, The closed world. Computer and politics of discourse in Cold War America, Cambridge, 1998, xiii (‘discourse’) Hecht, The radiance of France, 11 Edwards also points to the importance of discourse analysis in technology studies. Edwards, The closed world, 30, 34, 40 For a critical overview of theoretical work on discourse analysis and its use for historians see: Sarasin, Philipp, Geschichtswissenschaft und Diskursanalyse, Frankfurt, 2003 Anderson, Benedict, Imagined communities. Reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism, London, 1983 See for a recent overview of studies on nationalism: Zimmer, Oliver, Nationalism in Europe 1890-1940, New York, 2003 Im Hof, Ulrich, Mythos Schweiz. Identität - Nation - Geschichte 1291-1991, Zürich, 1991; Altermatt, Urs (ed.), Die Konstruktion einer Nation. Nation und Nationalisierung in der Schweiz, 18.-20. Jahrhundert, Zürich, 1998; Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz; Crettaz, Bernard, Ah Dieu, que la Suisse est jolie!, Lausanne, 1997 Zimmer, A contested nation Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz, 5 Confino, Alon, The nation as a local metaphor. Württemberg, imperial Germany and national memory 1871-1918, London, 1997 Original titel Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz. Konstruktionen nationaler Identität/ La Suisse imagineé. Bricolages d’une identité nationale. Marchal used the idiom of the Swiss sociologist Bernard Crettaz who elaborated this concept from the anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss. See: Crettaz, Bernard, ‘Nouveaux bricolages d’ altitude. Fin, commencement et épuisement des Alpes’, in: Marchal, Erfundenen Schweiz, 51-62 “Es ist zunächst nicht etwas naturhaft Gewachsenes, sondern eine je aktuelle Imagination, die aufgrund gewisser Vorgaben und in einem gewissen zeitbedingten Kontext möglich geworden ist. Näher betrachtend erscheint so ‘nationale Identität’ als jene imagologische ‘Bastelei’, die Bezug auf die ‘Nation’ nimmt und durch die Konstruktion von Sinn-Bildern für die Mitglieder von national verfassten Gesellschaften identitätsstiftend wirkt.” Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz, 12 The national archives in Berlin have a manuscript collection on the Gotthard Railway. Unfortunaely, the old German handwriting hindered detailed study there. The Bernese archives offered a broad range of collected items, (grey) literature, newspaper articles and primary source material. The archives’ collections played a significant role in the way I defined my research.

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Chapter 1 Ržiha, Franz, Beurtheilung des St. Gotthard-Tunnelbaues, Separat Abdruck aus der Zeitschrift des österr. Ingenieur- und Architekten-Vereins IV und V, Wien, 1875, 2 77 Mathys, Männer der Schiene, 230 78 Vogel, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 190 79 Andreae, Charles, Hundert Jahre schweizerischer Tunnelbau, Zürich, 1948, 14 80 Ržiha Beurtheilung des St. Gotthard-Tunnelbaues 81 See in this respect the pioneering work of Thomas P. Hughes and the many studies his work inspired. Hughes, Thomas P., Networks of power. Electrification in Western society, 1880-1930, Baltimore, 1988 82 Kranakis, Eda, Constructing a bridge. An exploration of engineering culture, design and research in nineteenth-century France and America, Cambridge, 1997 83 Hecht, The radiance of France 84 See: Hård, Mikael, ‘German regulation: The integration of modern technology into national culture’, in: Hård, The intellectual appropriation of technology, 33 85 See: Dinhobl, Günter, ‘Eisenbahnen und Kulturtransfer zur Internationalität von Eisenbahnen am Beispiel der Studienreisen von Eisenbahntechnikern in der Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts’, in: Internationalität der Eisenbahnen 1850-1970, Burri, Monika and K. Elsasser, D. Gugerli (ed.), Zürich, 2003; Dinhobl, Günter, Die Semmeringbahn. Der Bau der ersten Hochgebirgseisenbahn der Welt, München, 2003. On workers’ identity and tunneling in the nineteenth century see: Turner, Morton J., ‘Digging tunnels, building an identity: sandhogs in New York City, 1874-1906’, in: New York History Jan., 1999, 29-70 86 Dinhobl, Internationalität der Eisenbahnen, 157 87 König, Wolfgang, ‘Funicular versus suspension railways: Swiss mountain railway engineers in conflict with a foreign competing technology, 1900-1940’, in: ICON (4), 1998, 57-65. See for his work on mountain railways and tourism: König, Wolfgang, Bahnen und Berge. Verkehrstechnik, Tourismus, und Naturschutz in den schweizer Alpen (1870-1939), Frankfurt, 2000 88 Elsasser, Kilian T., ‘Hoffnungen in die Bohr- und Sprengtechnik’ in: Bärtschi, Kohle Strom und Schienen, 178; Kovári, Kalman and R. Fertig, Historical Tunnels in the Swiss Alps. Gotthard Simplon Lötschberg, Zürich 2000, 16 89 With an average of 0.7- 0.8 meter per day, Favre deemed these drills inefficient. See: Saitz, Tunnel der Welt-Welt des Tunnel, 36 90 Elsasser, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 174 91 Kuoni, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 154 92 Kuoni, Allein ganz, 67 93 The historian Tom F. Peters argues that time and money constraints led to heavy pressure on the work practice and on the engineers in charge in Building the nineteenth century, Cambridge, 1996, 102 94 Favre built up experience during the construction of the Credo Tunnel for the line LyonGeneva, the Grandvaux Tunnel and the Cornallaz Tunnel between Lausanne and Fribourg. Mathys, Männer der Schiene, 190 95 Sautter de Beauregard, a Geneva banker, for example, sent a letter of recommendation to the Gotthard Railway Company. Kuoni, Allein Ganz, 51 96 Mathys, Männer der Schiene, 183; Peters, Building the nineteenth century, 139; Vogel, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 190 97 Elsasser, Kohle Strom und Schienen, 175 98 Ernst von Stockalper (1838-1919) was the first graduate from the canton Wallis at the Polytechnikum in Zurich. Mathys, Männer der Schiene, 230 76



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See for the history of the Rhone River Correction: Speich, Daniel, ‘Herren über wildes Wasser. Die Linthingenieure als Bundesexperten im 19. Jahrhundert’, in: Schweizer Pioniere der Wirtschaft und Technik, 82, Zürich, 2006; Speich, Daniel, Linth Kanal. Die korrigierte Landschaft, 200 Jahre Geschichte, Glarus, 2002 100 See: Elsasser, Kohle Strom und Schienen, 175. Elsasser says nothing about the background of Seguin and his potential relation to the famous Seguin nephews, pioneers of railway construction in France. 101 Treichler, Bahnsaga Schweiz, 51-52 102 Kuoni, Allein ganz, 69 103 Koppe, Carl, Die Vorarbeiten für den Bau der Gotthardbahn. Absteckung und Durchschlag des Gotthard-Tunnels. Sammlung populäre Schriften herausgegeben von der Gesellschaft Urania zu Berlin am Polytechnikum in Braunschweig, Berlin, 1894, 34 104 See for example: Königl. Polytechnische Schule zu Hannover, Studien-Reise der BauIngenieure nach der Gotthard-Bahn, Hannover, 1878; Ethelson, C.G., Notes of a visit to the works of the St. Gothard Railway, London, 1881; Hymans, Louis, Le Mont Cenis et le Saint Gothard, Verviers, 1882; J.D., Der St. Gotthard- Pass. Einst und Jetzt. Ein Bild aus der Schweizer Geschichte, Wien, 1879 Engineering journals published regularly on tours in the tunnel and on lectures given about the Gotthard Tunnel after visits. 105 Ržiha himself praised the welcome in his lecture. 106 Dinhobl, Die Semmeringbahn, 37 107 See a short (and rare) biography of Ržiha under www.wissenschaftskalender.at (October 2007) 108 Ržiha, Franz, Lehrbuch der gesammten Tunnelbaukunst, Berlin, 1872 109 See for the reception of Ržiha’s influence: Andreae, Charles, ‘Wandlungen im Tunnelbau seit Ržiha’, in: Festgabe der GEP zur Hundertjahrfeier der Eidgenössischen technischen Hochschule in Zürich, Zürich, 1955, 63-78 110 On average 2,600 people worked in Airolo and Göschenen, of which 94% came from Italy, mostly from the little villages of northern Italy and only 2% from Switzerland. The average age was 28, the youngest employee 12. The daily salary was approximately 3.50 SFR. Favre paid the workers relatively well; the Swiss salaries for unskilled labour were higher in Switzerland than in Italy. However, he deducted a fee for health care. Moreover, workers bore the costs of clothing and oil for the mining lamps. . Favre opened special stores where workers had to buy their food; the profit flowed into Favre’s coffers. See; Kuoni, Kohle, Strom und Schiene, 144-164 111 See for example: Hymans, Mont Cenis et le Saint- Gothard, 115 112 The Association of Engineers and Architects in Zurich visited the works in September 1874, the Swiss engineering journal Eisenbahn published a report of this visit of engineer Von Muralt. The report explained and discussed the working procedures. Because this visit took place around the same time as Ržiha’s I use it here for the description of the work. To explain details, I added some secondary sources about tunnelling practices. Von Muralt, ‘Beschreibung der Bauten am Gotthardtunnel’, in: Eisenbahn (Second attachment no. 8), 26-02-1875. See for additional secondary literature: Beaver, Patrick, A history of tunnels, London, 1972, 5-6; Peters, Building the nineteenth century, 147; Saitz, Tunnel der Welt-Welt des Tunnel; Striegler, Werner, Tunnelbau, Berlin, 1993; West, Graham, Innovation and the rise of the tunnelling industry, Cambridge, 1988; Andreae, Hundert Jahr Schweizerischer Tunnelbau For a recent coverage of diverse older and newer tunnelling projects see: Stine, Jeffrey K. and H. Rosen, Going Underground. Tunnelling past, present and future, Kansas City, Missouri, 1998 113 In addition to this description: The drilling and blasting took two and a half hours; the clearing of the debris took another three and a half. People worked in the Gotthard Tunnel around the clock in different shifts. See: Beaver, A history of tunnels, 76

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114 At the time, manual construction was still much cheaper than mechanical drilling. See: Andreae, Festgabe der GEP, 74 115 Sometimes, the water flowed 200 liters per minute, the temperature rose up to 330C. Eventually the workers’ shifts changed from 8 hours to 5 hours. Compare: Saitz, Tunnel der Welt-Welt des Tunnel, 36; Beaver, A history of tunnels, 76 116 For the description of the life of men and women in the workers’ towns of Göschenen and Airolo see: Binnenkade, Kohle, Strom und Schiene; Kuoni, Kohle, Strom und Schiene, 144-164 117 Ržiha, Beurtheilung des St. Gotthard-Tunnelbaues. In this chapter, as in the others, I translated the German, French and Italian quotes into English. 118 Ržiha, Beurtheilung des St. Gotthard-Tunnelbaues, 2 119 Ržiha, Beurtheilung des St. Gotthard-Tunnelbaues, 5 120 Ržiha, Beurtheilung des St. Gotthard-Tunnelbaues, 5 121 In the late nineteenth century, reference to the Austrian identity did not overlap with references to the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary. Since 1867, the Habsburg monarchy bound two parliaments: the Hungarian and the Austrian. Bohemia, the region in which Ržiha was born and studied, belonged to the Austrian part- dominated by Germanspeaking inhabitants. R.R. Palmer and J. Colton, A history of the modern world, 1992 (first edition 1950), 559 122 Ržiha, Beurtheilung des St. Gotthard-Tunnelbaues, 2 123 Ržiha, Beurtheilung des St. Gotthard-Tunnelbaues, 10 124 Ržiha, Lehrbuch der gesammten Tunnelbaukunst, 135; See for this argument: Andreae, Festgabe der GEP, 75 125 Ržiha explained that the mechanical construction of a heading was always the most expensive part. Hence, when the construction method required two headings, this would double the costs. 126 Austrian engineers, in contrast to their German colleagues, strongly engaged themselves in national politics, which however did not raise their self-esteem. See: Mikoletzky, Juliane, ‘Der “österreichische Techniker”, in: Plitzner, Klaus, Technik-Politik-Identität. Funktionalisierung von Technik für die Ausbildung regionaler, sozialer und nationaler Selbstbilder in Österreich, Stuttgart, 1995, 111-124, 118 127 Other works of Ržiha, published in the same period, give a comparable image of the way in which Ržiha positioned and legitimised the position of engineering and tunnelling in Austria. He accepted the invitation to write an addition to the tunnelling exhibition at the World Exhibition in Vienna because he wanted to underline the importance of the scientific discipline of railway technology, especially because the Austrians built the Semmering Railway and the exhibition had taken place in Vienna. Ržiha, Franz, Officieller AusstellungsBericht Eisenbahn Unter- und Oberbau, Wien, 1876, Vorrede 128 See for a similar critical tone the publication: Von Muralt, Eisenbahn 129 Gerwig lived from 1820 to 1885. See: Eggerman, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, 62; See also: Kuntzemüller, Albert, Robert Gerwig, Freiburg i. Brsg, 1949 130 See for this argument Könyves- Tóth, M., ‘Der Durchschlag des Gotthardtunnels’, in: Technische Mittheilungen des schweizerischen Ingenieur und Architekten Vereins (17), 1880, 3 131 Häsler put words into Favre’s mouth in response to Gerwigs criticism: “Ich baue den Tunnel, wie ich will!” He also argues that the differences in language caused major problems: Favre spoke no German and an interpreter translated all conversations. See Häsler, Gotthard, 134, 137 132 The Monitore delle strade ferrate e degli interessi materiali: lavori pubblici, commercio, finanza was issued between 1868-1803 in Turin, 28.04.1875 133 Monitore delle strade ferrate, 28.04.1875 [SBB GB 212.7 bd 12]



Endnotes

134 Häsler, Gothard, 151 135 Published letter of May 5, 1875 by Daniel Colladon entitled ‘I lavori alla galleria del Gottardo’, in: Monitore delle strade ferrate, 19-05-1875, 325-327 [SBB Historic GB 212.7 bd 12] 136 Colladon, Monitore delle strade ferrate, 19-05-1875, 327 [SBB Historic GB 212.7 bd 12] 137 Gerwig published a response in the Journal de Genève denying all accusations. He stated that he held no grudge against his former employee and he had only wanted to open a discussion on an important topic. Published letter of May 20, 1875, by Robert Gerwig in: Journal de Genève, 23-05-1875 [SBB Historic GB 212.7 bd 12] 138 See for this argument: Könyves- Tóth, Technische Mittheilungen, 3 139 Häsler, Gotthard, 150 140 Two weeks after the lecture, on February 14, 1875, the Swiss Department of Railway and Trade received a letter from the Swiss ambassador in Vienna. The ambassador wrote that he had personally contacted Ržiha, after the negative press coverage about the Gotthard Tunnel. He sketched Ržiha’s severe criticism that had shocked him. The ambassador promised to send a copy of Ržiha’s lecture to the Department of Railway and Trade as soon as possible. See: handwritten correspondence [Schweizerisches Bundesarchiv E53 (Eisenbahn) bd 83]. Maraini, engineer and envoy for the Gotthard Railway Company in Rome, notified Escher about Gerwig’s publication and the stir it caused in Italian political circles. Maraini advised Escher to counterbalance the negative press with trustworthy information about the progress of the works. Escher transmitted in a telegram the latest tunnel advancements to rectify the numbers used by Ržiha. See: correspondence Maraini to Escher, 2-5-1875. [SBB Historic GB 212.7 bd 12 ] 141 Ržiha in his handbook referred to Kauffmann’s work on the Swiss Hauenstein tunnel. See: Pressel and J. Kauffmann, Der Bau des Hauensteintunnel, Basel/Biel, 1860. Cited in: Ržiha, Lehrbuch der gesammten Tunnelbaukunst 142 Kauffmann, J., Bau des Gotthardtunnels, Zürich, 1875 143 The government’s chief inspector, Koller, sent Kaufmann’s reports to the Swiss consulates in Turin, Paris, Rome, Naples, London, Washington, Milan, Venice, Genoa, Livorgno, Brussels, Trieste, Amsterdam, Bremen, Hambourg and Leipzig, on 3-7-1875 [Schweizerisches Bundesarchiv E53 (Eisenbahn) bd 83]. 144 Kauffmann, Bau des Gotthardtunnels, 1 145 In 1878, Tunnel Inspector Kauffmann published his ideas in the Deutsche Bauzeitung, 1878, no. 3, 12, 22, 29 146 Moeschlin, Wir durchbohren den Gotthard, 458, 147 See Hellwag’s obituary in Der Eisenbahn,14-01-1882 148 Kuoni, Allein ganz, 93 149 Hellwag, Wilhelm, Technische und finanzielle Vorbedingungen zur Rekonstruction der Gotthardbahn: Ansichten und Vorschläge, Zürich, 1878 150 Hellwag’s report cited in: Häsler, Gotthard, 162 151 Despite the Hellwag’s report, Escher refused to discharge Favre. See: Kuoni, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 157 152 During the Gotthard Tunnel construction, the Swiss engineering journal Die Eisenbahn published the tunnel’s progress reports and articles. During 1874 and 1875, several long articles appeared see: Die Eisenbahn 14-06-1874; 25-08-1874; 15.09-1874; 01-10-1875 153 Von Muralt, 26-02-1875; Vögeli, Albert, ‘Eine kritische Skizze über den Bau und gegenwärtigen Stand der Arbeiten am grossen Gotthard-Tunnel’, in: Eisenbahn, 1-10-1875, 121 154 Lorenz, Alfred, First- oder Sohlenstollen bei Tunnelbauten?, Zürich, 1875 155 See: Könyves-Tóth, M., ‘First oder Sohlenstollen’, in: Technische Mittheilungen des schweizerische Architektenvereins 17, 1880, 201

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156 Compare: Striegler, Tunnelbau. Striegler argues that, although tunnelling has a basis in theoretical principles, it remains an ‘Erfahrungswissenschaft’, or scientific experience. 157 Peters, Building the nineteenth century, xiii 158 Peters, Building the nineteenth century, 354 159 Favre’s death was added to a long list of tunnel constructors who died during the construction period of nineteenth-century tunnels: Germain Sommeiller (1815-1871) died a few months before the opening of the Mont Cenis tunnel; Alfred Brandt (1846-1899) died before the Simplon tunnel opened (1906); Julius Lott did not live to see the completion of the Arlberg Tunnel (1884) in Austria and died in 1883. 160 Kauffmann cited in: Neue Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ), 04-03-1880 161 For a biography of Gustave Bridel see: Bridel, Gustave, ‘Ingenieur Gustave Bridel 1827-1884’, in: Berner Zeitschrift für Geschichte, 1952, 55-71 162 Bridel, Gustave, Tunnel mit maschineller Richtstollenbohrung: Zweckmässigkeit des Firststollen- oder des Sohlstollenbetriebes, Luzern, 1883, 8 163 Bridel, Tunnel mit maschineller Richtstollenbohrung, 3 164 Andreae, Hundert Jahre schweizerischer Tunnelbau, 9 165 See: Andreae, Hundert Jahre schweizerischer Tunnelbau. A thorough history of Swiss tunnelling -and of tunnelling in general- is lacking. Most of the histories available discuss the major historical tunnelling projects in the world. A comprehensive story about the interrelationships between the different tunnelling projects, or a history about tunnelling as a profession is missing. For a most recent history of tunnelling in Switzerland, see: Kovári, Kalman and R. Fechtig, Historical tunnels in the Swiss Alps. Gotthard, Simplon, Lötschberg, Zürich, 2000; Kovári, Kalman and F. Descoeudres, Tunneling Switzerland, Zürich, 2001 166 See: Andreae, Hundert Jahre schweizerischer Tunnelbau, 9, 20; Andreae, Charles, ‘Der Anteil der Schweiz an der Entwicklung des Tunnelbaues’, in: Staub, Walter and A. Hinderberger, Die Schweiz und die Forschung. Eine Würdigung schweizerischen Schaffens, Bern, 1944, 380 167 See: Andreae, Die Schweiz und die Forschung, 385; Andreae, Hundert Jahre schweizerischer Tunnelbau, 20 168 Andreae, Hundert Jahre schweizerischer Tunnelbau, 9; Andreae, Die Schweiz und die Forschung, 379 169 Between 1932 and 1947, new biographies on Favre appeared, some of them for young readers. In 1932, Ernst Eschmann wrote a piece on Favre among 15 other Swiss ‘doers’. Eschmann, Ernst, Männer und Taten. Aus dem Leben berühmter Eidgenossen, Stuttgart, 1934. Josef Reinhart, a well-known childrens’ book writer, wrote Hart wie Granit. Bilder aus dem Leben Louis Favre. In 1944, a book appeared about eight Swiss pioneers, including Favre. See: Dehaas, Schweizer Pioniere der Technik, 275-317. Related to the 100th birthday of railways in Switzerland, Ernst Mathys (the librarian of the Swiss Federal Railway) wrote a small section about Favre. Mathys, Männer der Schiene. In the same year, the 1906 Schweizer eigener Kraft got re-issued. See for other biographies on Favre: Ineichen, Louis Favre; Reinhart, Hart wie Granit; Spaeni, Louis Favre; Vogel, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 181 170 See for a reflection of Swiss heroes in books for the Swiss youth: Helbling, Barbara, Eine Schweiz für die Schule. Nationale Identität und kulturelle Vielfalt in den Schweizer Lesebüchern seit 1900, Zürich, 1994 171 Richard, Schweizer eigener Kraft, 3 172 Richard, Schweizer eigener Kraft, 24 173 Historian Kilian Elsasser, reacting to Favre’s heroism, argues that Favre misjudged what it required to build almost 15-kilometer long tunnel. Favre took little time for serious preparations and he ignored the consequences of efficient drilling techniques, which re-



Endnotes

quired a strict management process. The choice for a top-heading and the slow excavation of the full tunnel profile aggravated the general problems of water, heat and dust in the tunnel. Moreover, the continuous pressure under which everybody in the tunnel had to work, took an enormous toll in terms of deaths and illnesses. Favre’s naiveté in blindly trusting technological and scientific progress dragged the whole enterprise into misfortune. Elsasser, Kohle Strom und Schienen, 173 174 Dehaas, Schweizer Pioniere der Technik, 281; Richard, Schweizer eigener Kraft, 3 175 See: Helmut, Alexander, ‘Technik und Landesbewußtsein in Tirol’, in: Plitzner, Klaus, Technik-Politik-Identität, 39-51 176 In 1937, the Swiss Engineer and Architect Association celebrated its 100th anniversary. In the opening article, the author remarks that the Gotthard Railway stimulated the technical sciences. See: Naef, Hans, 100 Jahre SIA = Schweizerischer Ingenieur- und ArchitektenVerein, 1837-1937. Festschrift zum 100-jährigen Bestehen des Vereins, Zürich, 1937, 17-18 177 See for histories of the Polytechnikum (ETH Zürich): Gugerli, David , P. Kupper, and Speich, D., Die Zukunftsmaschine. Konjunkturen der ETH Zürich 1855-2005, Zürich, 2005; Guggenbühl, Gottfried, Geschichte der Eidgenössischen technischen Hochschule in Zürich, Zürich, 1955 178 See: www.ethistory.ethz.ch/materialien/zahlen, (October 2007); Gugerli, Die Zukunftsmaschine, chapter 2 179 Even today, engineers argue that, although tunnelling has a basis in theoretical principle, it remains an ‘Erfahrungswissenschaft’, or a science of experience. See for this argument: Striegler, Tunnelbau. 180 See: Naef, 100 Jahre SIA, 15 181 Treichler, Bahnsaga, 107 182 Saitz, Tunnel der Welt-Welt des Tunnel, 27 183 Whether nationalistic interests played a role in this choice is difficult to demonstrate. Vogel, Kohle Strom und Schienen 184 See: Waegeli, Hans, ‘Ferdinand Rothpletz 1872-1949’, in: Sechs Schweizer Alpenbahningenieure, Meilen, 2001

Chapter 2 185 Schaffhauser Intelligenzblatt, 24-02-1880 186 For the description of the festivities I rely on a contemporary account by Ernst Kohl and numerous newspaper clippings. Kohl, Ernst, Die Einweihung der Gotthardbahn, Berlin, 1882 187 See for newspaper clippings and telegrams [SBB Historic 232 bd 106: Bau der Gotthardtunnel. Stollendurchschlag am 29. Februar 1880] 188 NZZ, 04-03-1880 189 Luzerner Tagblatt, 21-05-1882 190 Frey, Thomas and L. Vogel, “Und wenn wir auch die Eisenbahn mit Kälte begrüssen...” Verkehrsintensivierung in der Schweiz 1870-1910. Ihre Auswirkungen auf Demographie, Wirtschaft und Raumstruktur, Zürich, 1997, 359 191 Basler Nachrichten, 25-05-1882 192 Leo Marx studied the symbolic role of the railways in American society. He refers to the rhetoric of the ‘technological sublime’, in which the train symbolised man’s triumph over nature, but also was seen as a monster that destroyed the landscape, ‘The impact of the railroad on the American imagination, a possible comparison for the space impact’, in: Mazlish, Bruce, The railroad and the space program. An exploration in historical analogy, Cambridge, 202-216, 213

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193 Hettling, Manfred, ‘Die Schweiz als Erlebnis’, in: Altermatt, Urs (ed.), Die Konstruktion einer Nation. Nation und Nationalisierung in der Schweiz, 18.-20. Jh., Zürich 1998, 19-31 194 Zimmer, A contested nation, 163 195 Kreis, Georg, Die Schweiz unterwegs. Schlussbericht des NFP 21 “Kulturelle Vielfalt und nationale Identität”, Basel, 1993, 47; Messmer, Kurt, ‘Geschichtsunterricht in der Zentralschweiz: von der Vaterlandskunde zur historischen Lernwerkstatt’, in: Marchal, Guy, Geschichte in der Zentralschweiz. Forschung und Unterricht, Zürich, 1994, 41-89 196 Palmer, Catherine, ‘From theory to practice. Experiencing the nation in everyday life’, in: Journal of Material Culture, 1998, 3(2), 175-199 197 Confino, The nation as a local metaphor, introduction 198 In their book on cartography in Switzerland, Gugerli and Speich argue that the mapping of Switzerland was an important tool for the creation of a sense of belonging. People could visualise the bigger territory of the nation and relate their own living space to that of other villages, cities and rivers on the map. See their: Topographien der Nation. Politik, kartographische Ordnung und Landschaft im 19. Jahrhundert, Zürich, 2002 199 See for example: Pritchard, Sara B., ‘Reconstructing the Rhone the cultural politics of nature and nation in contemporary France, 1945-1997’, in: French Historical Studies 27(4), 2004, 765-799; For studies on the cultural appropriation of the railways see, for example: Freeman, Michael J., Railway and the Victorian imagination, 1999, New Haven; DarianSmith, Eve, Bridging divides. The Channel Tunnel and English legal identity in the new Europe, California, 1999; Stein, Jeremy, ‘Reflections on time, time-space compression and technology in the nineteenth-century’, in: May, John and N. Thrift, Timespace. Geographies of temporality, London, New York, 2001, 106-119. For older, yet influential, studies see: Marx, Leo, The machine in the garden: technology and the pastoral ideal in America, New York, 1964; Schivelbusch, Wolfgang, Geschichte der Eisenbahnreise. Zur Industrialisierung von Raum und Zeit um 19. Jahrhundert, München, Wien, 1977; For a study on the sociocultural appropriation of underground infrastructure (e.g. railway tunnels) see: Williams, Rosalind, Notes on the underground. Essay on technology, society, and the imagination, Cambridge, 1990 200 Elzinga, Aant, ‘Theoretical perspectives: culture as a resource for technological change’, in: Hård, The intellectual appropriation of technology, 17-31, 23 201 Darian-Smith, Bridging divides 202 Marx, The Machine in the garden; Williams, Notes on the underground; Freeman, Railway and the Victorian imagination 203 Williams, Notes on the underground, 54 204 Frey, Und wenn wir, 364 205 Frey, Und wenn wir, 357 206 Merki, Christopher, Und wieder lodern die Höhenfeuer als Hoch-Zeit der nationalen Ideologie Zürich, 1995; NZZ issued 5,000 newspaper, twice a day around these decades. Frey, Und wenn wir, 363 207 Kuoni, Allein ganz, 117 208 Merki, Und wieder lodern, 124 209 Eisner, Manuel, ‘“Wir sind wir?” Wandel der politischen Identität in der Schweiz 1840-1987’, in: Schweizerisches Sozialarchiv, Bilder und Leitbilder im sozialen Wandel, Zürich, 1991, 29 210 See for an analysis of late nineteenth-century Europe: Palmer, A history of the modern world, 583 211 See: Palmer, A history of the modern world, 642; for a more detailed study of the civilizing mission in the colonies Adas, Michael, Machines as the measure of men. Science, technology, and ideologies of western dominance, Chapel Hill, 1989



Endnotes

212 Palmer, A history of the modern world, 625 213 Palmer, A history of the modern world, 598 214 Widmer, Thomas, Die Schweiz in der Wachstumskrise der 1880er Jahre, Zürich, 1992; Compare: Siegenthaler, Hansjörg, ‘Die Schweiz 1850-1914’, in: Fischer, Wolfram, Handbuch der europäischen Wirtschafts -und Sozialgeschichte, Stuttgart, 1985, 443-473 215 Frey, Und wenn wir, 181 216 According to the historian Kuoni, Escher received an invitation, even though it was rumoured that Escher had not received one; others insisted he was simply too ill to come. See: Kuoni, Allein ganz, 179 217 Tagblatt der Stadt St. Gallen und der Kantone St. Gallen, Appenzell und Thurgau, 25-05-1882 218 Kohl, Die Einweihung der Gotthardbahn 219 Term of art historian Kenneth Clark employed by Williams, Notes on the underground, 59 220 NZZ, 24-05-1882 221 NZZ, 24-05-1882 222 Speech Zingg, Seperat Drück [SBB Historic Gotthardbahn 232 bd 103; French]; NZZ 24-05-1882 223 NZZ, 24-05-1882 224 Kohl, Die Einweihung der Gotthardbahn, 16 225 Peters, Building the nineteenth century, 354 226 NZZ 24-05-1882 227 NZZ 24-05-1882 228 NZZ 24-05-1882 229 See for a similar argument: Williams, Notes on the underground, 60 230 NZZ 24-05-1882 231 During the festive breakthrough dinner in Airolo, the portrait of Louis Favre hung above all heads. A private telegram, published in the NZZ, reproduced the words underneath the portrait. NZZ 04-03-80 Private telegram. 232 NZZ 04-03-1880 Privat telegram 233 NZZ 04-03-1880 234 The literal text: “Ai lavoranti al traforo del Gottardo- den Arbeitern am Gotthard-Tunnel Marzo 1880. Germania-Helvetia- Italia Viribus Unitis.” 235 NZZ 24-05-1882 236 NZZ 24-05-1882 237 NZZ 24-05-1882 238 NZZ 24-05-1882 239 Many of the cantons that initially supported the Gotthard Railway were disgruntled by the cutting of the lines and refused additional financial support. Eventually, after long debates, the parliament allowed additional financial support, however, only after the government promised an equal amount for potential tunnel projects in the eastern and western part of Switzerland. Häsler, Gotthard, 234, 235. After this hurdle was taken, people in westSwitzerland used their power to demand a referendum about the, in their eyes, enormous government subsidy. In contrast to what the opponents of the Gotthard had hoped for, the referendum of January 1879 showed the voters’ trust in the realisation of the Gotthard Railway. See Kuoni, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 154 240 NZZ 24-05-1882 241 The Swiss citizens living and working in Milan invited the Swiss delegates for a breakfast. Chenevière was Conseiller National de Genève. Der Bund 28-05-1882; Carteret was Représentant de Genève. 242 NZZ, 24-05-1882

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243 Quoted in: Kohl, Einweihung der Gotthardbahn, 14. Compare: Sebastiano Tecchio, the president of the Italian Parliament and an old man. He referred in his speech to the democratisation process of the three nations involved when he said to have been an advocate of the Italian parliament for over thirty-four years and he thanked Switzerland and Germany explicitly for showing Italy “the path to democracy.” NZZ, 24-05-1882 244 See for a business-historical discussion about the role attributed to the railways by nineteenth-century Italian politician: Schram, Albert, Railways and the formation of the Italian state in the nineteenth century, Cambridge, 1997 245 NZZ 24-05-1882 246 NZZ 24-05-1882 247 NZZ 24-05-1882 248 NZZ 24-05-1882 249 NZZ 24-05-1882 250 NZZ 24-05-1882 251 Herrer, Madeleine, ‘Internationalismus als Aussenpolitik’, in: Studer, Brigitte (ed.), Etappen des Bundesstaates. Staats- und Nationalbildung der Schweiz, 1848-1998, Zürich, 1998, 134 252 Most of them made use of the history of the Gotthard Railway construction written by the archivist of the Gotthard Railway Company, Wanner, Rückblick auf die Entstehung und den Bau der Gotthardbahn, 1882 253 Schaffhauser Intelligenzblatt, 24-02-1880 254 Das Vaterland. Konservatives Zentral Organ für die Deutsche Schweiz (ehemals “Luzerner Zeitung”) 21-05-1882 255 Das Vaterland, 21-05-1882 256 Züricher Post, 28-05-1882 257 The reporter from the Gazette de Lausanne understood the moody Urner population because they had invested in the Gotthard Railway that would also deprive them of their sources of income. “Pauvre gens”, poor people, the Gazette exclaimed. Gazette de Lausanne, 30-05-1882. The Thurgauer Zeitung also understood the cold attitude of the Urner people, but it thought that they exaggerated the negative effect on Uri’s economy. 28-05-1882 258 Quote in: Braun, Adolphe, Gotthard. Als die Bahn gebaut wurde, Zürich, 1982, 27 259 Compare Schiller’s An die Freude “Seid Umschlungen, Millionen! Diesen Kuß der ganzen Welt!” Translated into English as: Ode to joy “Be embraced, you millions! This kiss for the entire world!” 260 Urner Wochenblatt quoted in: NZZ, 28-05-1882 261 Waldis, Es begann am Gotthard, 21 262 In 1883, migration peaked in Uri as well as Switzerland in general. See: Reszler, André, ‘Mythes-utopie et identité de la Suisse’, in: Les Suisses dans le miroir. Les expositions nationales suisses. Lausanne, 1991, 9-16 263 Bavier quoted in: Trüb, Walter, Als die Eisenbahn noch König was: Eisenbahnen im Verkehrshaus der Schweiz, Luzern, 1972 264 Gazette de Lausanne, 27-05-1882 265 Frey, Und wenn wir, 365 266 Der Landbote und Tagblatt der Stadt Winterthur, 25-05-1882 267 Compare: reference to ‘la mère-patrie’ in : Journal de Genève (national, politique et littéraire), 24-05-1882 268 Journal de Genève, 24-05-1882 269 Das Vaterland, 21-05-1882 270 Thurgauer Zeitung, 28-05-1882 271 Basler Nachrichten, 25-05-1882 272 Das Vaterland, 21-05-1882



Endnotes

273 “Œuvres de Satan que tout cela.” Gazette de Lausanne (et Journal Suisse), 22-5-1882 274 Gazette de Lausanne, 22-05-1882 275 Scholars have paid ample attention to the relationship between the Alpine myth and Swiss identity. See for examples the edited works of Jattie Enklaar, Urs Altermatt, Guy Marchal, Oliver Zimmer and Georg Kreis. 276 Journal de Genève, 27-05-1882 277 Journal de Genève, 27-05-1882 278 Journal de Genève, 27-05-1882 279 Der Landbote, 28-05-1882 280 Das Vaterland, 21-05-1882 281 Das Vaterland, 24-05-1882 282 Der Bund, 31-05-1882 283 Gazette de Lausanne, 22-05-1882 284 Zimmer, A contested nation, 6 285 Basler Nachrichten, 25-05-1882 286 Basler Zeitung, 23-05-1882 287 Urner Zeitung, 27-05-1882; Urner Wochenblatt noted: “The times are changing and so are we.” 03-06-1882 288 Urner Zeitung, 27-05-1882 289 Das Vaterland, 21-05-1882 290 Widmer, Die Schweiz in der Wachstumskrise, 35 291 Reszler, Les Suisses dans le miroir 292 Die Schweizerische Landesausstellung von 1883 in Zürich, 150 Jahre Verlag Matthieu, Zürich, 2002 293 Reszler writes that celebrating the Gotthard meant: “celebrating the glory of the engineer, the conquest of the Alps, the victory of humankind over nature and the triumph of technology.” Les Suisses dans le miroir, 15 294 Reszler, Les Suisses dans le miroir, 15 295 Reszler, Les Suisses dans le miroir, 16 296 Jost, Hans-Ulrich, ‘Landesausstellung und nationalen Selbstdarstellung’, in: Kohler, Georg and S. Moos, Expo-Syndrom. Materialien zur Landesausstellung, Zürich, 2002

Chapter 3 297 Frey, Und wenn wir, 345 298 Frey, Und wenn wir, 344 299 Lupi, Fausto, La ferrovia del Gottardo e il suo contributo allo sviluppo turistico ticinese, Bern, 1950, 105 300 Kalt, Robert in: Trüb, die Gotthardbahn, 218 301 Lupi, La ferrovia del Gottardo, 55 302 Spitteler, Carl, Der Gotthard, Frauenfeld, 1897, 95 303 In 1887, the tourist bureau for the Lake of the Four Forest Cantons in cooperation with the Gotthard Railway Company published a map of Central Switzerland made by X. Imfeld. See: advertisement Der Bund, 11-06-1887. For the world exhibition in Chicago in 1893, the Gotthard Railway Company asked the Swiss Fridolin Becker (professor Polytechnikum in Zurich) and Johann Weber to create a map and several watercolours from the Gotthard Railway. See: NZZ 10-02-1893. For a multitude of leaflets and printed train schedules, see: [SBB Historic GB 2002/009_049/050/051_01] 304 Kaden, Woldemar, Die Gotthardbahn und ihr Gebiet, Luzern, 1883, 9. In the same year and with the same publishing house, he issued the guide in Italian with the title: La ferrovia del Gottardo ed i suoi dintorni.

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305 Grube, Wilhelm A., Ueber den Gotthard: Reise-Skizzen, Bern, 1871. See reference in Wikipedia under August Wilhelm Grube: Braun, Rolf: August Wilhelm Grube Mathematikunterricht und Erziehung. Die monographische Methode A. W. Grube als didaktisch-methodisches Konzept eines erziehenden Rechenunterrichts, zugleich ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Grundschuldidaktik der Mathematik, Frankfurt am Main, 1979 306 Other examples are: Berlepsch, Hermann Alexander, Lucerne and the Lake of the Four Cantons and the Gotthard, Luzern, 1876; Osenbrüggen, Eduard, Der Gotthard und das Tessin mit den oberitalienischen Seen, Basel, 1877 (second edition 1880). Ossenbrüggen was professor of history at the Polytechnikum in Zurich. 307 Other milestones in the history of the Gotthard Pass also triggered attention to the Gotthard region. See for example after the realisation of the new pass road: Lusser, Karl Franz, Fünfzehn Ansichten der neuen St. Gotthard-Hospiz der neuen St. Gotthard-Strasse vom Gotthard-Hospiz bis Lugano, Zürich, 1833; Businger, Josef M., Luzern & seine Umgebungen: Rigi, St. Gotthard & Pilatus…, Luzern, 1833. Although much frequented as a pass, the Gotthard received equal attention than the other Swiss passes. In principle, passage was possible during summer and winter, but during the long winter, the passage often closed, due to snowfall or avalanches. 308 Apart from the many travel guides published, the Gotthard Railway could count on the interest of many foreign newspapers. See, for example, the editions of Illustrirtes BadeBlatt (August, 1890 and July, 1893); Vienna Weekly News (March 17, 1891); Internationale Fremden Zeitung (München, October 1, 1883); Le Temps: Les stations d’été en suisse (June 16, 1894). Strassburger Post (October 1893, 8); La Saison en Suisse: Journal hebdomadaire des touristes et voyageurs en Suisse (July, 1882). 309 Shields, Places on the margin, 6 310 Soja, Edward W., Thirdspace, Oxford, 1996; Urry, The tourist gaze; Urry, John, Consuming places. To name a few of these case studies: Hetherington, Kevin, ‘Identity formation, space and social centrality’, in: Theory, culture and society, 13, 1996, 33-52, on New Age Travellers and the symbolic site of Stonehenge. Berdahl, Daphne, Where the world ended. Reunification and identity in the German borderland, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London, 1999; Donald, James, ‘How English is it? Popular literature and national culture’, in: Morley, David and K. Robins (ed.), Spaces of identity, London, 1995 311 These social and cultural geographers draw on insights from the linguistic turn and French philosophers such as Foucault and Lefebvre. See, for example: Shields, Places on the margin, 31 312 For the definition of tourism and its specificities, I made use of the following scholarly works: Urry, John, The tourist gaze. Leisure and travel in contemporary societies, Bristol, London, 2002 (first edition 1990); Urry, John, Consuming Places, London, 1995; Rojek, Chris, ‘Indexing, dragging and social construction of tourist sights’, in: Urry, John and Chris Rojek, Touring cultures. Transformations of travel and theory, London, 1997; Crouch, David and N. Lübbren, Visual culture and tourism, Oxford, New York, 2003; May, Timespace; Morley, David and K. Robins (ed.), Spaces of identity. Global media, electronic landscapes and cultural boundaries, London, 1995. For the importance of defining centre and periphery for tourist sites, see: Selwyn, Tom, The tourist image. Myths and myth making in tourism, New York, 1996, introduction, 10. Robert Shields mentions in this respect ‘marginality’ of spaces. Shields, Robert, Places on the margin. Alternative geographies of modernity, London, 1991 313 Urry, The tourist gaze 314 Rojek Touring cultures, 53 315 Nye, David E., American technological sublime, Cambridge, 1996 316 See for this argument Duncan, James and D. Gregory, Writes of passage. Reading travel writing, London, 1999; Urry, The tourist gaze; Rojek, Touring cultures



Endnotes

317 Selwyn, The Tourist Image, 24 318 Duncan, Writes of passage, 3 319 Tissot, Laurent, La naissance d’une industrie touristique. Les Anglais et la Suisse au XIXe siècle, Lausanne, 2000 320 According to König, this development cannot be understood as true mass tourism. See his Bahnen und Berge; also Frey, Und wenn wir, 336 321 König, Bahnen und Berge, 15 322 Frey, Und wenn wir, 354 323 Tissot describes how the travel guide gradually became a means of publicity. Tissot, La naissance d’une industrie touristique, chapter 4 324 Catlin, George, L., Switzerland, (with compliments of) the St. Gotthard Railway, Lucerne, 1890. For correspondence with Catlin and Gotthard Railway Company see: [SBB Historic GB03, 98] 325 There are no statistics available about tourism in Lucerne before 1892. For those between 1892 and 1914 see: Frey, Und wenn wir, 337 326 In 1860, Lucerne counted 100 beds. In 1880, after the hotel boom in the 1850s when the Centralbahn reached Lucerne, the number of beds grew to 2370. In 1892, the number was 3800. See Frey, Und wenn wir, 334. See also: Waldis, Es begann am Gotthard. 327 Woldemar Kaden wrote: “What a pity would it be when Switzerland would sink into its future position as a transit country. No, she has to - and will - stay the happy and beautiful destination, just like the country on the other side of the Gotthard, the land surrounded by the blue lakes”. Kaden, Die Gotthardbahn und ihr Gebiet, 9 328 The Gotthard Railway primarily created economic advantages for Ticino. Frey, Und wenn wir, 346 329 The Baedeker, who issued a Swiss guide since 1844, offered the travellers practical details for travelling in Switzerland, deprived of personal notes and descriptions. While the popularity of the Gotthard Railway grew, the Baedeker devoted attention to the regions accessible by new railway line. However, it never concentrated on the Gotthard Railway itself. Baedeker, Karl, Die Schweiz nebst angrenzenden Theilen von Oberitalien, Savoyen und Tirol, Leipzig, see editions 1868-1913 330 Leo Woerl (1843-1918) was a publisher and bookseller. (See: Online-catalogue Deutsche Bibliothek). His publishing house was initially located in Würzburg and Vienna. The book he issued on the Gotthard was entitled: Der Gotthard einst und jetzt: Vom Verfasser der “Schweizer Alpen”, Würzburg, Wien, 1883; Hermann Alexander von Berlepsch (1814 Göttingen - 1883 Zürich). In 1854, he published the Ilustrirte Alpen-Führer. Malerische Schilderungen des Schweizerlandes, with a Leipzig publisher. Increasing German tourism to Switzerland was the main reason for Berlepsch to publish this guide. See: Berlepsch, Ilustrirte Alpen-Führer, v. In 1862, he published the Neuesten Reisehandbuch für die Schweiz, in the German series Meyer’s Reisebücher (from 1865 onward Berlepsch edited the Meyer’s). This text for this booklet is often revised. In 1861, another work appears Die Alpen in Natur- und Lebernsbildern with illustrations of Emil Rittmeyer. In that same year, an English translation is published; in 1868, the French translation; and in 1871, a Swedish one. 331 Thürler, Emil, A, Die Berge am Vierwaldstätter-See für Touristen und Alpenfreunde, Luzern, 1888, preface. The book cover presented Türler as a Member of the Swiss Alpine Association (Schweizer Alpenclub). A Gotthard Railway brochure was planned but never printed. Die Berge und Täler der GB [Gotthardbahn]. The publisher, Doleschal’s Buchhandlung, advertised the guide in general terms for tourist and friends of the Alps. Türler’s booklet served locals, Swiss and foreign travellers and focused on ‘explorers’ of the Alps.

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332 In 1893, the brochure of Catlin was re-issued under the title Over the Alps via the Saint Gotthard Railways. It would be reprinted in 1894, 1896, 1899 and 1901. In 1901, Jakob Hardmeyer-Jenny, a famous Swiss teacher and writer, translated Catlin’s brochure into German Nach Italien mit der Gotthardbahn. By then Hardmeyer had obtained fame through his writings about the Gotthard for the series Europäische Wanderbilder and was well-acquainted with the Gotthard. The French version: A travers les Alpes par le chemin de fer du Saint-Gothard, was reprinted six times between 1895 and 1906. 333 See: Correspondence Materialverwaltung 7-03-1901 [SBB Historic GB 228 bd. 98 map 405] 334 [SBB Historic 228 bd 95 map 401] 335 Tissot, Tissot, La naissance d’une industrie, 86 336 [SBB Historic GB03 228 bd. 98 mp. 405] 337 Schivelbusch, Wolfgang, The railway journey, Leaminton, 1986; Haug, Christine, ‘“Ein Buchladen auf Stationen, wo sich zwei Linien kreuzen, müsste gute Geschäfte machen...” Der deutsche Bahnhofs- und Verkehrsbuchhandel von 1850 bis zum Ende der Weimarer Republik im internationalen Vergleich’, in: Burri, Die Internationalität der Eisenbahn, 71-89 338 See for example Leo Woerl, whose publishing house issued a travel library, pleasant literature, dictionaries and travel guides. 339 Background information about the travel guide writers is difficult to find. They gained little fame outside of the genre. Yet, the internet offers a rich source for finding reliable information. The Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Hamburg as well as the University of Ulm and the digitalisation of Meyers Konversationslexicon give some details. See: Verlag des Bibliographischen Instituts, Leipzig und Wien, Vierte Auflage, 1885-1892 340 Kaden, Die Gotthardbahn und ihr Gebiet, 40 341 Boniforti, Luigi, Il Lago Maggiore e gita al S. Gottardo: nuovissima guida compendiosa e pratica, Milano, 1880, 86; Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 187 342 Catlin, the St. Gotthard Railway 343 Grube, Ueber den Gotthard, 6 344 The Gotthard Railway Company found one of the most famous Swiss writers for this job, Carl Spitteler. Between 1894 and 1896, it offered Spitteler several first class tickets to ‘study’ the Gotthard Railway. See: Graf, Barbara, ‘Eine Reise durch den Gotthard mit Carl Spitteler’, in: Treichler, Bahnsaga Schweiz, 63. In 1895, NZZ published excerpts of Spitteler’s wanderings. In 1897, publishing house Huber, in close cooperation with the railways company, printed 4000 copies of Spitteler’s booklet Der Gotthard. See: [SBB Historic GB 228 99 map 407] 345 [SBB Historic GB 228 99 map 407] 346 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 7 347 Osenbrüggen, Eduard, Der Gotthard und das Tessin mit den oberitalienischen Seen, Basel, 1880 (first edition 1877), preface, x 348 Catlin, Over the Alps, the St. Gotthard Railway, 24 349 Grube, Ueber den Gotthard, 1 350 In the German edition of this series, the introduction explicated that goal of the series was to enlighten the travel about the beautiful German landscapes and to strengthen the ‘Heimatgefühl’. See for the quote: http://www.hs-merseburg.de/~nosske/EpocheII/rs/e1r_ rlde.html (October 2007) 351 In 1908, the German series ‘Rechts und Links der Eisenbahn’ asked the famous Swiss cartographer and professor at the Polytechnikum in Zurich, Fridolin Becker, to write about the Gotthard Railway. Becker, Fridolin, Rechts und Links der Eisenbahn: Die Gotthardbahn, (heft 73), Gotha, 1908



Endnotes

352 In 1882, the series Europäische Wanderbilder commissioned Jakob Hardmeyer-Jenny to write a Gotthard publication. Hardmeyer-Jenny, Jakob, Die Gotthardbahn, Europäische Wanderbilder 30,31,32, Zürich, Paris, London, 1888 (first edition 1882, second 1883, sixth 1907, 1979), 7; In 1885, Eugène Rambert translated and edited the guide for Frenchspeaking tourists in: La ligne du St-Gothard, Zürich, 1885. Johann Weber illustrated all editions. In 1883, the Swiss publishing house Orell-Füssli issued a second edition. 353 Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz: http://www.hls-dhs-dss.ch/textes/d/D28215.php (October 2007) 354 In 1291, as the legend goes, representatives of the regions Uri, Schwyz and Unterwalden swore an oath to help each other defending their territory against aggression from the Habsburgs. This ‘Oath of Alliance’ took place on the Rütli meadow. From 1891, the Swiss officially celebrated this event as the foundation of their federation. See: Kreis, Georg, Mythos Rütli. Geschichte eines Erinnerungortes, Zürich, 2004. Wilhelm Tell has a similar mythical appeal in Swiss society. In the village Altdorf, governor Gessler forced Wilhelm Tell to shoot an apple from his son’s head with a bow as a punishment for Tell’s disobedience. Despite Tell’s flawless shot, he was taken into custody because he planned to kill the governor with a second arrow, should he miss the apple and kill his son. The clever Tell managed to escape and awaited Gessler in a hollow road to murder him. The legend became popular in Switzerland, tightly interwoven with the foundation myth. 355 Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 27-28 356 Compare: Messmer, Geschichte in der Zentralschweiz, 41 ff 357 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 17 358 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 40; Türler, Die Berge am Vierwaldstätter-See, 54 359 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 40 360 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 215 361 Der Gotthard. Einst und Jetzt, title page. It contains a little rhyme. 362 See: Koch Berneck, Max von, Führer auf der Gotthardbahn und deren Zufahrtslinien, Zürich, 1882, 24; Honegger, Jakob A., Der Gotthard in Bild und Wort, Trogen, 1880, 44 363 Honegger, Der Gotthard in Bild und Wort 364 Honegger, Der Gotthard in Bild und Wort, 35, 11 365 In 1882 or 1883, a booklet on the Gotthard appears: Berlepsch, Die Gotthardbahn und die Italienischen Seen: Beschreibendes Reisebuch für alle Eintrittsrouten nach dem Vierwaldstätter-See und dem Tessin, Zürich, 1882 366 Berlepsch lived in Switzerland since 1848. Since that time, Berlepsch already published on Switzerland in general and about specific Swiss regions. See: Ursula, Berlepsch, and K. Berlepsch, Hermann Alexander von Berlepsch, von seiner Flucht aus Erfuhrt im Jahre 1848 bis zur Einbürgerung in Graubünden, 2001 367 See his article about the technical details of the Gotthard Railway construction: Berlepsch, Hermann A., ‘Die Gotthard-Bahn: Beschreibendes und Geschichtliches’, in: Petermann’s Mittheilungen 65, Gotha, 1881. He also wrote about the breakthrough of the Gotthard Tunnel in the Deutsche Zeitung, 05-03-1880 [SBB Historic GB 2002/009_049_01; SBB Historic GB 2002/009_050_01; SBB Historic GB 2002/009_051_01] 368 General guides to Switzerland added a detailed description about the construction work, like for example Gsell-Fels, Die Schweiz Volks-Ausgabe, Zürich, 1881, 50 369 Kaden, Die Gotthardbahn und ihr Gebiet, 9 370 Der Gotthard-Pass einst und jetzt, viii 371 Türler, Emil, A., St. Gotthard, Airolo und Val Piora Pittoreske Beschreibung der Natur und Landschaft des St. Gotthardgebirges: Mit Berücksichtigung der geschichtlichen und militärischen, sowie der geologischen, botanischen und zoologischen Verhältnisse. ..., Bern, 1891; Türler, Die Berge am Vierwaldstätter-See, 54

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372 Hardmeyer’s travel guide, from 1888, for example, ties Gotthard’s natural sublime (Erhabenheit) to the magnificence (Großartigkeit) of technology. Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 41-42 373 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 48 374 Berlepsch, Die Gotthardbahn und die Italienischen Seen, 126 375 Catlin, Over the Alps, the St. Gotthard Railway, 7 376 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 7-8 377 The published version: Schnyder, Michael, Gotthard und Simplon, Luzern, 1906, 5 378 Leo Marx writes in this respect: “(…) the affecting object was not so much the machine itself, but rather the spectacle of the machine in the natural landscape in his The railroad and the space program, 209 379 With the construction of the Rigi cogwheel in 1871, an era of mountain railways commenced. They brought tourists comfortably to the mountains. For example Pilatus Railways (1889), Monte Generoso Railways (1890). See: Moser, Patrick, “So wird die Jungfrau zur Demoiselle gemacht.” Projektierung und Bau der Jungfraubahn, Zürich, 1997, 9; König, Bahnen und Berge, 1892; Burri, Monika, Bergbahnbau, Touristindustrie und bürgerlicher Naturgenuss im ausgehenden 19. Jahrhundert. Die Vitznau-Rigi-Bahn als Prototyp der touristischen Zahnradbahn, unpublished, 2002, 42 ff; Frey, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 89 380 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 128 381 Catlin, St. Gotthard Railway, 15-16 382 Catlin, St. Gotthard Railway, 17; Türler, Die Berge am Vierwaldstätter-See, 54 383 Honegger, Jakob A., Der Gotthard - Le Gothard - Il Gottardo, Trogen, 1882 (first edition 1880) 384 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 50 385 Berlepsch, Die Gotthardbahn und die Italienischen Seen, 128. The Italian guide, written by professor Brusoni, member of the Como alpine association, referred to the church of Wassen as a perfect place to admire the superb railway. Brusoni, Edmondo, Da Milano a Lucerna, Bellinzona, 1901, 406 386 Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 41 387 Fridolin Becker cited in: Speich, Daniel, ‘Alpenblick mit Geländer Technisch hergestellte Landschaftserlebnisse in der Moderne’, in: Ganz normaler Bilder. Historische Beiträge zur visuellen Herstellung von Selbstverständlichkeit, Gugerli, David and B. Orland (ed.), Zürich, 2002, 47-65, 62 388 Honegger, Der Gotthard in Bild und Wort, 1880, 18; Berlepsch, Die Gotthardbahn und die Italienischen Seen, 130; Kaden, Die Gotthardbahn und ihr Gebiet, 67 389 See on Zahn: www.svbbpt.ch/Literatur/deutsch/treschT26a.htm (October 2007). Other positive features were attributed to Goeschenen. Spittler mentions the healthy Alpine nature. Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 53 390 For example, Osenbrüggen’s guide consists of two major parts: ‘Ueber den Gotthard’ and ‘Durch den Gotthard’. Osenbrüggen, Der Gotthard und das Tessin, 33. The Berlepsch of 1912, offered the route ‘Die Gotthardstrasse von Göschenen über Andermatt und den St. Gotthard nach Airolo’ in his general guide to Switzerland. Spitteler’s travel account consists of two parts: one describes the Gotthard by railway, the other the Gotthard by foot. The first sections focus on the Gotthard Railway. In the back of the book, a map of the Gotthard Railway is inserted. The Woerl describes the long journey through the tunnelunder-construction and later in the text offers the description of the route ‘4. GöschenenAirolo’. 391 Catlin, St. Gotthard Railway, 15 392 Boniforti, Il Lago Maggiore e gita al S. Gottardo, 93 393 Brusoni, Da Milano a Lucerna, 417



Endnotes

394 Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 1888, 28 395 See: Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 135; Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 1888, 66 396 Velocity had negative side effects, according to the guides. The guides described a lack of time to enjoy the scenery: the train is speeding on, entering new tunnels that take away their sight repeatedly. Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 1888, 25; Berlepsch, Die Gotthardbahn und die Italienischen Seen, 124. See for full accounts on the appreciation of velocity and train travel the famous work of Schivelbusch; Stein, Timespace 397 Türler, Emil A., St. Gotthard Airolo und Val Piora. Pittoresque Beschreibung der Natur und Landschaft des St. Gotthardgebirges. Mit Berücksichtigung der geschichtlichen und militärischen, sowie der geologischen, botanischen und zoologischen Verhältnisse. Für Alpenfreunde dargestellt, Bern, 1891, 34 398 Honegger, Der Gotthard in Bild und Wort, 14 399 “A mi me pas ch’i üsei anch’a lur passan la galleria.” Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 1888, 66 400 Der St. Gotthard- Pass. Einst und Jetzt, 28-29 401 Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 1888, 35 402 Osenbrüggen, Der Gotthard und das Tessin, 32; Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 1888, 28 403 Hardmeyer, Der Gotthard und das Tessin, 1888, 64 404 Kaden, La ferrovia del Gottardo, 84 405 Der Gotthard-Pass einst und jetzt, 24 406 Catlin, St. Gotthard Railway, 16 407 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 53 408 Widmann, Joseph, V., Jenseits des Gotthard. Menschen, Städte und Landschaften in Oberund Mittel-Italien, Frauenfeld, 1888, 9. Widmann (1842-1911) from Austro Hungarian origin was an influential editor of the Swiss newspaper Der Bund. 409 Williams, Notes on the Underground 410 Osenbrüggen, Der Gotthard und das Tessin, preface. See for a historical account Lupi, La ferrovia del Gottardo 411 Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 1888, 3-6 412 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 76 413 Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 1888, 89 414 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 84 415 Der Gotthard einst und jetzt, 31 416 Der Gotthard einst und jetzt, 30; See Hardmeyer, Die Gotthardbahn, 1888, 67 417 Schnyder, Gotthard und Simplon, 3 418 Kaden, Die Gotthardbahn und ihr Gebiet, 77 419 Osenbrüggen, Der Gotthard und das Tessin, preface 420 Berlepsch, Die Gotthardbahn und die Italienischen Seen, 155-156; Koch von Berneck, Führer auf der Gotthardbahn, 75 421 Spitteler, Der Gotthard, 9 422 Widmann, Jenseits des Gotthard, 343 423 Frey, Und wenn wir, 346 424 Lupi, La ferrovia del Gottardo, 54 425 Sandro, Guzzi, ‘Die Nation als fixe Idee. Vom schwierigen Umgang des Tessiner Kultur mit den helvetischen Sinnbildern’, in: Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz, 353-367, 359; compare: Graze, Die Eisenbahnen der Schweiz, 84 426 Catlin, Over the Alps, 6 427 See for these arguments a number of works: Jost, Hans-Ulrich, Nation, Politik und Kunst, in: Enklaar, Duitse Kroniek, 13-29; König, Bahnen und Berge, 92; Schumacher, Beatrice, Ferien. Interpretationen und Popularisierung eines Bedürfnisses. Schweiz 1890-1950, Wien,

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Köln, Weimar, 2000; Moser, So wird die Jungfrau zur Demoiselle gemacht. Enklaar, Duitse Kroniek, 6; Bärtschi, Hans-Peter, ‘Die Eisenbahn als Landschaftsgestalterin. Einblicke in die Baugeschichte der Schweizer Hauptbahnen’, in: Bärtschi, Kohle, Strom und Schienen, 14-62; Bärtschi, Hans-Peter, ‘Durchmessene Räume- durchmessene Zeiten. Die Eisenbahn als Landschaftsgestalterin’, in: Gugerli, David, Vermessene Landschaften. Kulturgeschichte und Technische Praxis im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, Zürich, 1999, 79-88; König, Bahnen und Berge, 92; Bieri, Susanne, “Als regne es hier nie…” Ansichtkarten/Cartes Postal. Bern, 2003, 45-46. For a similar argument about the Alps and alpine research: Eichelberg, Anja, ‘Alpensymbolik und Alpenforschung im jungen Bundesstaat von 1848’, in: Gugerli, David, Vermessene Landschaften, 181-193 428 Daniel Speich argues, in relation to nineteenth-century travel guides, that the assumed dichotomy between aesthetics and technology does not hold for the appreciation of the Swiss landscape. Engineering objects become related to the admiration of the modern landscape only in the late nineteenth century. Speich, Ganz normale Bilder, 47-65, 62 429 König, Bahnen und Berge, 14 430 Treichler, Bahnsaga Schweiz, 127 431 See: Bosshard, Felix, Der Gotthardvertrag von 1909. Ein Beitrag zur schweizerischen Innenund Aussenpolitik vor Ausbruch des Ersten Weltkrieges, Zürich; 1973; Wegelin-Zbinden, Sibylle, Der Kampf um den Gotthardvertrag: Schweizerische Selbstbesinnung am Vorabend des Ersten Weltkrieges, Bern, 1974 432 Graze, Die Eisenbahnen der Schweiz, 62 433 See also: Schütz, Eduard, Unsere Eisenbahnen im Dienste des Landes, Aarau, 1944 434 See: Publizitätsdienst der Schweizerischen Bundesbahnen, Von Nord nach Süd durch den Gotthard, Bern, 1909 and 1911; Landa, Myer Jack, From north to south by the electric St. Gotthard line, Berne, 1922, 1926, 1930, 1936 435 Trüb, Walter, ‘Die Entwicklung des Betriebs auf der Gotthardstrecke’, in: Eggerman, Die Bahn durch den Gotthard, 43 436 Lupi, La ferrovia del Gottardo, 57 437 Lupi, La ferrovia del Gottardo, 122 438 Speech Nationalrat Heinrich Walter ‘50 Jahre Gotthardbahn’ [SBB Historic Gotthardbahn 232 bd 107] 439 Vela presented this monument during the Swiss National Exhibition in Zurich in 1883. By then, the monument commemorated not only the workers, who died during the construction work in the tunnel, but also Louis Favre. Favre’s bust, originally present in Vela’s work, disappeared in the work unveiled near the railway station in Airolo, in 1932. 440 See: Schema für die Jubiläumsfeier der Gotthardbahn in Airolo [SBB Historic Gotthardbahn 232 bd 105] 441 Detailprogramm und Anordnungen zur Erinnerungsfeier an den 50 jährigen Betrieb der Gotthardbahn am 31. Mai und 1. Juni 1932 [SBB Historic Gotthardbahn 232 bd 105] 442 Hilber, Paul, 50 Jahre Gotthardbahn Gedenkschrift für die Schulen, Bern, 1932, 25 443 See posters Gotthardbahn, Museum für Gestaltung, Plakatsammlung (1889;1932) 444 Letter of the Schweizerische Bundesbahnen Kreisdirektion II to the people involved in the spectacle (Lucerne, 06-06-1932) [SBB Historic Gotthardbahn 232 bd 106] 445 Arx, Caesar von, 1882-1932 Hörspiel zum Jubiläum der Gotthardbahn, Bern, 1932, 26 446 Eschmann, Männer und Taten 447 Travelling the Gotthard as an educative trip continued into the 1940s as in the youth series Schweizerisches Jugendschriftenwerk: Angst, Walter, Mit 12000 ps durch den Gotthard. Technische Reise eines jungen Eisenbahnfreundes, 1944



Endnotes

Chapter 4 448 Fontana, Oskar M., Der Weg durch den Berg, Berlin, Wien, Leipzig, 1936, 6 449 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 183 450 Arx von, Hörspiel zum Jubiläum der Gotthardbahn; Bührer, Jakob, Stimmen über dem Gotthard. Hörspiele und Anderes, Aarau, 1936 451 Bühler, Paul, Der Gotthardtunnel: Die Tragödie Louis Favre. Drama in sechs Bildern, St. Gallen, 1942; Bührer, Jakob, Dramatische Dichtung: Gotthard, Zürich, 1952; Thürer, Georg, Das Spiel vom St. Gotthard. Ein Gleichnis des jungen Schweizers in der werdenden Eidgenossenschaft, Glarus, 1934 452 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg (1947, Berlin) (1959, Hamburg, Wien); Chable, JacquesEdouard, Saint-Gothard: Roman, Lausanne, 1940 (second edition in the same year) translated as: Chable, Jacques-Edouard, Sankt Gotthard: Arbeits- und Abenteuer Roman, Zürich; 1940; Schnetzer, Rudolf, Schicksal am Gotthard Roman, Basel, 1940; Geiler, Emilio, Gotthard- Express 41 verschüttet. Eisenbahner-Roman, Rüschlikon, 1942 (second edition in the same year) translated in French Le drame de l´express du Gothard: Roman, Lausanne, 1942 (in 1947 published with preface from Chable). In the same year translated in Italian: l’espresso del Gottardo 41 è scomparso: un ferroviere presenta il suo romanzo, Bellinzona, 1942. In Swedish as Ekspres 41 forulykket, København, 1945 in Dutch Gotthard-expres 41: Een Zwitserse spoorweg-roman, Antwerpen, 1947. Also by Geiler, Emilio, Lokomotiv Führer Lombardi Erzählungen aus dem Eisenbahnerleben. Translated into Italian as well in Il macchinista Lombardi: dalla vita di un ferroviere, Bellinzona, 1945; Moeschlin, Wir durchbohren den Gotthard (second edition 1957 and 1965). 453 Hans-Werner Niemann introduces this type of literature as an interesting source, especially because it differs from the so-called high literature. Unterhaltungsliteratur is written to entertain a large audience and, to reach high sales figures, more sensitive to the interests of its middle class readers. See: Niemann, Hans-Werner, ‘Der industrielle in der deutschen Erzählliteratur der Jahre 1890 bis 1945’, in: Segeberger, Harro, Technik in der Literatur, Frankfurt am Main, 1987, 174- 232 454 Lexikon der Schweizer Literaturen, Basel, 1991 455 The only exception is the work of Felix Moeschlin, a well-known Swiss writer. He published a thick descriptive novel full of details about the Gotthard Tunnel construction. His plans for writing the novel originated in the 1930s. He wrote to the General Direction of SBB that he had been planning to write a novel about the construction of the Gotthard Railway for some time already. (Uetikon am See, 03-07-1934) [SBB historic GB 232 bd 105]. Unfortunately, he put no references in his work, which makes it too untrustworthy as secondary literature because fact and fiction blur. 456 I use the word ‘literature’ here. In general terms literature encompasses textual ways by which people give meaning to the world around them. Heusden, Barend, van, Literaire cultuur, Nijmegen, 2001, 26. In other chapters, I deal with this broad definition of literature as an almost unlimited source of practically all texts, produced by people. However, in this chapter, I focus on the literature in a more classical definition when I relate to novels, plays, poems and radio plays. 457 Daly, Nicholas, Literature, technology, and modernity 1860-2000, Cambridge, 2004. See for examples in relation to railways: David Nye; Ginette Verstraete; Rosalind Williams, John Stilgoe; Michael Freeman; Wolfgang Schivelbusch 458 Daly, Literature, technology, and modernity, 2, 3. A vast body of theoretical academic work exists on literature analysis. It is not the aim of this chapter to give an overview. 459 Williams, Notes on the underground, 19 460 Hård, The intellectual appropriation of technology, 66

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461 Historical studies on this period describe the Swiss society as grotesque. The focus on ‘Swiss identity’ was enormous and there was little space for contrasting opinions. 462 Hans Ulrich Jost uses here the word Ungleichzeitigkeit (non-synchronism) borrowed from Ernst Bloch, a German philosopher, to explain the tensions in his ‘Bedrohung und Enge (1914-1945)’, in: Geschichte der Schweiz und der Schweizer, Basel, 2004, 750 (first published 1986) 463 The divide became known as the ‘Röstigraben’ The Röstigraben is named after a popular Swiss German potato dish ‘Rösti’ 464 Historians describe the pro-German attitude by looking at the numerous social relations Swiss-Germans had with Germans in the form of friendship, family ties, language and education. Moreover, many Germans lived in Switzerland and held influential positions. The French and the Italian speaking Swiss feared a possible ‘germanisation’. 465 Jost, Geschichte der Schweiz und der Schweizer, 2004 466 See for this argument also: Im Hof, Ulrich, Mythos Schweiz. Identität-Nation-Geschichte 1291-1991, Zürich, 1991, 245 467 Möckli, Werner, Schweizergeist Landigeist? Das schweizerische Selbstverständnis beim Ausbruch des Zweiten Weltkrieges’, Zürich, 1973, 7 468 Jost, Geschichte der Schweiz und der Schweizer, 758; “Im Hause muss beginnen, was leuchten soll im Vaterland”. Gotthelf and Keller have potentially said this. Imhof, Mythos Schweiz, 253 469 Hartmann, Karl, Staat und geistige Landesverteidigung. Staatsrechtlichte und bundesstaatliche Probleme der geistigen Landesverteidigung, Aarau, 1967, 25 470 Kulturbotschaf cited in: Pezold, Klaus, Geschichte der deutschsprachigen Schweizer Literatur im 20. Jahrhundert, Berlin, 1991, 77 471 Imhof, Mythos Schweiz, 254 472 Lasserre, Erfundene Schweiz, 191 473 The most famous example of a critical and reflexive attitude was the cabaret Cornichon in Zurich. Yet, larger audiences in Switzerland appreciated this attitude less. The cabaret formed the exception to the rule. Schult, Klaus-Dieter, ‘Literatur und Gesellschaft unter den Konstellation der Geistigen Landesverteidigung’, in: Pezold, Geschichte der deutschsprachigen Schweizer Literatur, 78 474 Mattioli, Aram, ‘“Aux Pays des Aïeux. Gonzague de Reynold und die Erfindung des neohelvetischen Nationalismus (1899-1912)’, in: Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz, 275-289; See also: Reynold, Gonzague, Grandeur de la Suisse, Neuchâtel, 1940 475 Originally, the organisers planned the exhibition for 1933 - 50 years after the first national exhibition in 1883. The economic crisis prevented it. The organisers postponed it several times until they finally chose the 6th of May 1939. Amidst the increasing aggression of Hitler’s Germany, the gates closed for some days after the Swiss government ordered the mobilisation in September 1939. See: Zimmermann, Werner, ‘L’exposition nationale de 1939 à Zurich’, in: Artellaz, Gérald, Les Suisse dans le miroir. Cents ans expositions nationales, Lausanne, 1991, 87 476 Lasserre, Erfundene Schweiz; Möckli, Schweizergeist Landigeist?; Artellaz, Les Suisses dans le miroir 477 Artellaz, Les Suisses dans le miroir 478 Möckli, Schweizergeist Landigeist?, 2 479 Marchal, Itinera , 37 480 The speeches in: Etter, Philipp, Sinn der Landesverteidigung, Aarau, 1936. See for a full analysis of Etter’s text: Sarasin, Philipp, Geschichtswissenschaft und Diskursanalyse, Frankfurt, 2003, 177-190 481 Jost, Geschichte der Schweiz und der Schweizer, 758 482 Gasser, Christian, Der Gotthard-Bund, Bern, 1984



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Schauffelberger, Erfundene Schweiz, 211 Schauffelberger, Erfundene Schweiz, 212 Cited in Schauffelberger, Erfundene Schweiz, 213 The Gotthard had fascinated Thürer before. In the early 1930s, Thürer published a play based on the history of the Gotthard Pass in which the opening of the pass by the Schöllenen Bridge formed the central element. Thürer, Das Spiel vom St. Gotthard As an outcome of the Botschaft ‘Pro Helvetia’ was founded as an independent private foundation to stimulate and guard Swiss national culture. Only in 1949, it became an institute formally linked to the Swiss state. The foundation flourished after the war during the Cold War. Another institution, which grew influential during the war, was Heer und Haus. It was a military unit charged with the education of soldiers and citizen. During the war its work was largely fused with the work of Pro Helvetia. See: Schweizer Lexicon, 243; Hartmann, Staat und geistige Landesverteidigung, 174 Thürer, Georg, Der Gotthard als Wegweiser, Bern, 1943 Thürer, Der Gotthard als Wegweiser, 4 Thürer, Der Gotthard als Wegweiser, 12 André Laserre describes the Landi as the Swiss answer to a war-torn Europe. The organisers presented Switzerland as an example for Europe and isolated from international politics. Lasserre, Erfundene Schweiz, 193 Jost, Geschichte der Schweiz und der Schweizer, 754 Thürer had clear mission when he wrote his play for amateurs on the national holiday, 1st of August 1933. In 1934, in the early days of the spiritual defence, he and Fridolin Hefti published a series of amateur plays under the title Reihe schweizerischer Volksspiele. The editors hoped that amateur plays would again become part of Swiss culture. According to them, ‘spoiled radio listeners and film viewers’ blemished Swiss culture (p. 38). The ‘unspoiled’ theatrical performances would offer both entertainment and critical composure for amateur-theatre companies and their audiences. Thürer and Hefti envisioned performances within small family circles, in church or at school. Cäsar von Arx, Fridolin Hefti and Georg Thürer wrote the five first issues. The series continued promoting Swiss theatre plays until the 1960s, when the 23th volume appeared. Schult, Geschichte der deutschsprachige Schweizer Literatur, 104 Näf, Karl, ‘Die Schweiz, das Herz Europas’, 1945 cited in: Lasserre, Erfundene Schweiz, 195 See for this information: Project historischen Roman: http://histrom.literature.at/cgi/ wrapcgi.cgi?wrap_config=hr_au_all.cfg&nr=26130 (October 2007) Nicollier, Alain and H.-C. Dahlem, Dictionnaire des écrivains suisses d’expression française, vol. 1, Genève, 1994, 167-169 Francillon, Roger, Histoire de la littérature Suisse Romande, Lausanne, 1996-1999, 244 Project historischen Roman : Schnetzer, R. 1899-1984. Editor and baker. http://histrom. literature.at/cgi/wrapcgi.cgi?wrap_config=hr_au_all.cfg&nr=26130 Schnetzer, Schicksal am Gotthard, 18 Schnetzer, Schicksal am Gotthard, 71 Schnetzer, Schicksal am Gotthard, 177-178 Schnetzer, Schicksal am Gotthard, 19, 66 In the novel, references to femininity strengthen the image of masculinity. Female characters reach true femininity through giving birth and being a mother. Schnetzer, Schicksal am Gotthard, 233 Chable, Saint-Gothard Chable, Sankt-Gotthard, backflap text Chable, Saint-Gothard, 39

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509 Chable, Saint-Gothard, 87, 80 510 Chable, Saint-Gothard, 47-49 511 Saint Gotthard lent his name to the Gotthard Massif and in his memory the Church built the Saint Gotthard Hospiz on the pass. For the priests on the pass, the saint stands for charity and peace, which drives them to provide shelter and help for travellers. In the novel, the presence of this hotel run by the priests also gives the travellers a sense of security. 512 The pass itself is the meeting point for people coming from the north and the south. In the novel, this meeting point evokes a contemplative atmosphere and marks two stages, not just two stages of the journey, but two stages of people’s lives. Chable, Saint-Gothard, 9 513 The Gotthard is not only a saint; it is also the personification of the mountain massif. Sebastien referred to it as a giant when he describes the Gotthard: Chable, Saint-Gothard, 47, 190, 244 514 Chable, Saint-Gothard, 131 515 We know little about the author and the play. 516 The doctoral thesis of A. Reininghaus does not refer to Fontana’s novel about the Gotthard. Reininghaus Alexandra, Oskar Maurus Fontana. Das Profil eines österreichischen Journalisten. Salzburg, 1983 517 Bühler, Der Gotthard Tunnel, 47 518 Bühler, Der Gotthard Tunnel, 66 519 Bühler, Der Gotthard Tunnel, 75 520 Bühler, Der Gotthard Tunnel, 107 521 These concepts do not have a proper English equivalent because they are strongly embedded in German culture. They mean as much as humanity and spiritual culture. Bühler, Der Gotthard Tunnel, 86 522 Bühler, Der Gotthard Tunnel, 121 523 Bühler, Der Gotthard Tunnel, 124 524 Bühler, Der Gotthard Tunnel, 115 525 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 44 526 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 11 527 In the novel Germaine Sommeiller (constructor of Mont Cenis tunnel) and, later in the novel, Pasquale Lucchini (early backer of the Gotthard Tunnel construction) appear to warn Favre. 528 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 64 529 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 12 530 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 183 531 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 223 532 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 311 533 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 312 534 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 319 535 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 1959, 335 536 Fontana, Der Weg durch den Berg, 321 537 See: Rutschmann, Verena, Fortschritt und Freiheit. Nationale Tugenden in historischen Jugendbüchern seit 1880, Zürich, 1994 538 Confino argues that this has been ignored by scholars, who interpreted Heimat sentiments as anti-modern statements made by those who refused to accept modern reality. Confino, The nation as a local metaphor, 121. See also Hecht, who argues that the local became a metaphor of the national in her The radiance of France, 236 539 Hecht also demonstrates that technological spectacles revealed themes such as: salvation, redemption and liberation, in an attempt to link the themes of modernity and tradition. Hecht, The radiance of France, 209; In contrast, Darian-Smith argues that the protection



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of the Kentish garden equalled the symbolic protection of English traditions. The English people persisted that the construction of the Channel Tunnel harmed the ‘Garden’, as it featured tradition and civilisation. See: Darian-Smith, Eve, ‘Legal imagery in the “Garden of England”’, in: Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 2, 1995, 395-411 Confino wrote about the formation of national identity and about the relationship between the regional Heimat-feelings in Baden-Württemberg and the German nation. Im Hof, Mythos Schweiz, 254; Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz “Eidgenossenschaft durch Tat der Technik!” Thürer, Das Spiel vom St. Gotthard, 1 In a special issue of the Duitse Kroniek on Switzerland, the editors Jattie Enklaar and Hans Esther show the interrelatedness between the way in which historians present Swiss history and Swiss mountainous nature. Enklaar, Duitse Kroniek, 6 Bergier, Jean-François, ‘La montagne imaginaire: réalité d’en-haut, perception d’en bas’, in: Marchal, Erfundene Schweiz, 63-69; Stremlow, Die Alpen aus der Untersicht Zimmer discusses the work of the Swiss historians Ulrich Im Hof and Guy Marchal in: Zimmer, Contested nation, 12-13 Compare: Morley, David, ‘Belongings. Place, space and identity in a mediated world’, in: European Journal of Cultural Studies, 4(4), 425-448, 427 Palmer, Journal of Material Culture, 176; Confino, The nation as a local metaphor See for a focus on collective memory the work of Confino, The nation as a local metaphor Wylie, Neville, ‘Le rôle des transports ferroviaires en Suisse, 1939-1945: les aspects militaire, économique et politique’, in: Relations Internationales, 95, 1998, 361-380 Schot, Johan, W. and T. J. Misa, ‘Inventing Europe: Technology and the hidden integration of Europe’, in: History and Technology, 21(1), 2005, 1-19, 9 The construction of the Channel Tunnel has attracted scholarly attention as a transborder infrastructure. Several studies, among which Darian-Smith’s stands out, reveal the sociocultural complexities involved in transborder infrastructure planning and construction. See for example the work of Laurent Bonnaud, Richard Rogers and Eve Darian-Smith. Bonnaud, Laurent, ‘The Channel Tunnel, 1955-1975. When the sleeping beauty woke again’, in: The Journal of Transport History 22/1, 6-22; Bonnaud, Laurent, ‘Le tunnel sous la Manche, des origines a nos jours: innovation et institutions’, in: Michèle Merger (ed.), Les entreprises et leurs réseaux: hommes, capitaux, techniques et pouvoirs, XIXe-XXe siècles, 1998, 643-658; Rogers, Richard, England and the Channel Tunnel, Amsterdam, 1998 www.alptransit.ch/pages/img/projekt/The_new_Gotthard_rail_link.pdf (Oktober 2007) www.alptransit.ch/pages/e/projekt/index.php (October 2007) Aargauer Zeitung, 05-07-2006 www.visiun-porta-alpina.ch (Oktober 2007) www.swissinfo.org/ger/startseite/detail/Gotthard_Bergstrecke_hat_nur_als_Marke_ eine_Zukunft.html?siteSect=105&sid=6835948&cKey=1151303455000 (October 2007) Regierungsrat Uri (26-01-2006) See: www.ur.ch/dateimanager/vorstoesse/file_antwort_209.pdf (October 2007) Bolli, Thomas, ‘Der Gotthard soll als Marke lanciert werden’, in: Erstfeld Tages-Anzeiger, 21-06-2006

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Summary

Summary

In Swiss society today, references to the ‘Gotthard myth’ are omnipresent and multifaceted. For many Swiss, the myth evokes a complex set of images in which both technology and Swiss national identity play a powerful role. Curiosity about the assumed co-construction of these two aspects drove the research for this book. Through a social constructivist, in-depth historical case study of the Gotthard Railway, this book explores the appropriation of the nineteenth-century Gotthard Railway in the formation of Swiss national identity. The existing historiography on the Gotthard is distinguished by two main storylines. The first focuses on the technological aspects of the Gotthard as a nineteenth-century railway project. In the 1850s and 1860s, the urge to plan an international Swiss railway passage through the Alps was strong. However, the Swiss national government, installed in 1848, lacked the political power to enforce a decision favouring one specific tunnelling project. When, in the 1860s, powerful governments of Germany and Italy put their cards on the Gotthard Tunnel, the Swiss powers sided with them to create a breakthrough in the battle between regional interests. The standard historiography positions the Gotthard Railway as a successful political and technological endeavour, and a milestone in Swiss history. The second body of historiographical works reflects on the Gotthard Mountains and the Pass as a mythical space and their function in the construction of Swiss national identity. In the same period as the Gotthard Railway construction, the Swiss tried to build a sense of national identity in which Alpine nature and the Gotthard Mountains featured increasingly prominently as important national icons. Especially in the interwar period, the Gotthard came to symbolise the core of Swiss history, Swiss values and Swiss defence. In this second body of literature, the nineteenth-century railway construction plays a minor part in the centuriesold, value-laden history of the Gotthard space. Even though, the Gotthard receives ample scholarly attention, neither the Swiss perception of the arrival of the Gotthard Railway into this mythical landscape nor the extent to which the formation of national identity influenced the construction of this major international railway line have been studied in depth. To address these issues, this book analyses the discourses of groups of actors such

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as engineers, politicians, newspaper journalists, tourist guide writers and novelists in their respective debates, speeches, journals, travel guides and novels. Each of the four empirical chapters focuses on one crucial period between the 1870s and 1940s during which the Gotthard Railway received heightened attention. This dissertation explores the extent to which these actors interlaced a sense of national identity with the meaning production surrounding the railway project. In chapter one, the engineering discussions about the Gotthard Tunnel construction illustrate that national building practices influenced the development of tunnelling methods. Yet, references to national identity hardly played a role in the discussion about the tunnel method chosen by Louis Favre, the tunnel’s entrepreneur. Even though a renowned Austrian tunnel engineer started the debate in a nationalist tone, others did not defend their points of view along nationalist lines. The debate centred on the question: to what extent should tunnelling be regarded a scientific endeavour rather than a pragmatic enterprise? Only in retrospect did biographers of Favre and historians of Swiss tunnelling celebrate Favre’s down-toearth attitude towards tunnelling as ‘typically Swiss’. The inaugural festivities in May 1882 formed the ultimate public moment to attribute meaning to the new international transit through the Gotthard Mountains, as discussed in chapter two. International and Swiss officials presented the railway as the example of international cooperation, civilisation and the triumph of humankind over nature that enabled the annihilation of the Alps. This rhetoric triggered various reactions in Swiss national and regional newspapers. In contrast to the dignitaries’ presentations, the newspapers drew a more critical picture, in which they discussed the positive and negative impact of opening the country to foreign influences. In all discourses, the metaphor of the Alps recurs prominently. The newspaper articles show that by symbolically annihilating the Swiss Alpine landscape by the Gotthard Railway, a core element of Swiss identity was threatened. The two different discourses revealed the contested processes of defining a Swiss national identity in relation to the Gotthard Railway. The inauguration provoked debates about larger issues, such as the tension between regional identity and national identity, mingled with opinions about modernity. Nevertheless, a willingness to change could be sensed in the newspapers: modernising the young nation state required sacrifices of the individual regions. The third chapter covers the period after the inauguration and before the First World War, in which travel guide writers played an important role in interweaving the spatial symbolic of the Gotthard region with the Gotthard Railway. Their guides presented the Gotthard Railway initially to a foreign (mainly German-speaking) audience. Their main goal was to bring the Gotthard region in the limelight as a



Summary

tourist destination accessible by the railway. The writers wove important developing elements of Swiss national identity into their narratives. In this manner, the Gotthard Railway brought the traveller past the birth-ground of the Swiss nation, through the unique Swiss Alpine nature tamed by a technological spectacle. These guides created a new image of the Gotthard landscape that tourists could consume. Without a preconceived aim, the guides prepared the fixed ‘tourist gaze’ on the Gotthard Railway, which, in the interwar period, would become the ultimate Swiss family outing: travelling the Gotthard became travelling to the symbolic ‘heart of Switzerland’. In the interwar period, politicians picked up the fame of the Gotthard as a central element for the military and spiritual defence of Switzerland. The military fortified the Gotthard Mountains as its last stronghold and politicians called upon the Swiss to protect ‘typically Swiss values’ of which the Gotthard became the central metaphor. The granite stood for the Swiss independence and its indomitable will, the rivers that originated from the Gotthard marked Swiss solidarity among the regions, despite the cultural differences. Hence, the fourth and last empirical chapter discusses various novels that appeared in the period between 1934 and 1943. In these novels, the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel became the décor against which Swiss and foreign novelists exemplified Swiss and universal values. Local people from the Gotthard region played a central role in these narratives. In their struggle to give meaning to the modernity heralded by the tunnel in relation to the traditional life on the pass, the tunnel became an icon for Swiss national identity and an example for a war-torn Europe. The outcome of the novels is the ultimate overlap of the Gotthard Mountains’ symbolism with the symbolism of the tunnel. At this point, the research comes full circle. The novelists rewrote the history of the drilling of the Gotthard Tunnel as the ultimate story of the co-construction of Swiss identity and the technological railway project. This book demonstrates that historical actors gradually interconnected the Gotthard Railway, the Gotthard Mountains and Swiss national identity through a contested and un-orchestrated process of tinkering with spatial, historical and material elements. The strength of the Gotthard as a national image lies in its capacity to synthesise apparent differences and tensions within the country. The research shows that because national identity is never self-evident, discourses on technological projects such as the Gotthard Railway help make abstract notions of identity tangible.

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